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Pew ERTCAN SCULPTURE 


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_ APRIL FOURTEENTH TO AUGUST FIRST | 


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ANT (UE AON Gel C8 By SO Sd Beds Bt 
Pe eo ON, OF AMERICAN 
peepee eieebe rt bln BY 
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MCMXXITI 


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APRIUDSFOURT RENT MMC A CS SSE LR oi 


MCMXXIII 


« A 
COPYRIGHT, 1923, BY 
THE NATIONAL SCULPTURE SOCIETY 


PN Sie ade) 


IN presenting to the public this exhibition of 
American sculpture within these grounds and build- 
ings, the National Sculpture Society gratefully acknowl- 
edges its indebtedness to the generous offer of the 
American Academy of Arts and Letters, of the Ameri- 
can Geographical Society, of the American Numismatic 
Society, of the Hispanic Society of America, and of the 
Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. 

The aim has been to make the exhibition thoroughly 
national in scope. A special effort has therefore been 
put forth to bring together the best work from all 
parts of the country, as well as that of Americans 
now abroad. 

In the present installation, a considerable number 
of important monuments can be shown only by pho- 
tographs. However, since the sculptural exhibits 
range in size from the coin to the colossal, the recent 
progress of American sculpture in all its branches is 
well indicated. Such a comprehensive exhibition by 
our Society would hardly be possible without the 
sympathetic cooperation of our lay members, to 
whom, now as in the past, our cordial thanks are due: 


HERMON A. MACNEIL, President. 


NATH ONAL SC Ole Pal Uris) Gia li 


Or Delenies hes 


HONORARY PRESIDENT 
DeAaNTE CHES PE her Eine El 


PRESIDENT 
HERMON SAS ViAcNE Le 


FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT 
JOSEPH HOWLAND HUNT 


SECOND VICE-PRESIDENT 
JOHN GREGORY 


TREASURER 
I. WYMAN DRUMMOND 


SECRETARY 
GCHAR LESS ein GN 


GxOH EM ue TE 
CisGe susie Ieley iGo HERBERT ADAMS 
JOON, GREGORY GAIL SHERMAN CORBETT 
HENRY SEEDING I. WYMAN DRUMMOND 
JOSERHE TOW LAIN DEEN CHARLES. ED HilNeiee 
Jake Ae TARCOLO ERS LEO LEN TEs: 


BESS IB EO TT EREVONNOls MAHONRI YOUNG 
ROBERT AITKEN 
DPALVATORE  BIEO TIE 
HARRIET Wer RISE MOT 
HERMON A. MacNEIL 
JOHN ve WITT WARNER 
ADOLPH A. WEINMAN 


Vil 


ole NORM ERICAN = sCULPTURE 


YO i EEC RION 


HERBERT ADAMS 
ROBERT AITKEN 
CHESTER BEACH 
JAMES E. FRASER 
DANIEL C. FRENCH 
CHARLES GRAFLY 


JOHN GREGORY 


ANNA V. HyaTT 
ISIDORE KonrTI 

Leo LENTELLI 
HERMON A. MACNEIL 
EDWARD McCCARTAN 
LoRADO TAFT 


BESSIE POTTER VONNOH 


A. A. WEINMAN 


Rie Ne cli VE salNe O REE Rei OI ES 


Baltimore . 

Boston . 

Chicago 

Cincinnati! we 

San Francisco and Los Angeles. 
Philadelphia 

>i Ouls 

Paris, France . 


Rome, Italy 


Hans SCHULER 

ALBERT HENRY ATKINS 
LorAbDOo TAFT 

CLEMENT J. BARNHORN 
EDGAR WALTER 
ALBERT LAESSLE 
VicTor S. HoLm 

JANET SCUDDER 

PauL MANSHIP 


EX OIBTELONGCOMAVET Ts esis 


ADOLPH A. WEINMAN, Chairman 


CHESTER BEACH 
DANIEL C. FRENCH 


EmiL_ Fucus 
Vil 


JOHN GREGORY 
ANNA V. Hyatt 
W. FRANK PurRDY 


ONE eis Nees 


PREFACE 


THE NATIONAL SCULPTURE SOCIETY 
Officers and Council 
Jury of Selection 
Representatives in Other Cities 
Exhibition Committee 
Sculptor Members 
Associate Sculptor Members 


Lay Members 


CATALOGUE 


Decale lama 


BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES, WITH ILLUSTRATIONS OF EXHIBITS 
OTHER THAN MEDALS AND PLAQUES 


ILLUSTRATIONS OF MEDALS AND PLAQUES 


eRe dell 
List OF SCULPTORS AND THEIR EXHIBITS 
List oF MEDALISTS AND THEIR EXHIBITS 


INDEX 


1X 


PAGE 


X11 
X11 


XV 


Bai 


349 
363 


BP eee Mee 7% 

ates Ge a, ‘ Maen Ae ot ¥ % - 

ve ahs oe 42% - ra » a ae 
SOA Me © eae es ke Be 
= . @ - — i ey a 7 y 


LANDSCAPE DECORATIONS AND: 
CPi Neos 
BY 
VITALE, BRINCKERHOFF AND 
Greiner 


ras. 
a ee 
7 i 2. 
} Sf 
h = 6 
. 
2? 
" 
- ® 
al 
’ 
" 
Uy ‘ 
Mos 
om 


rome eN Atlee UE PW sO CLE TY, 


SHUACPIES TTC eo 9 See Sl pied Bid geeks) 


ADAMS, HERBERT 

AITKEN, Rosert I. 
AKELEY, CARL E. 

ATKINS, ALBERT HENRY 
BARNHORN, CLEMENT J]. 
BATEMAN, JOHN M. 
BEACH, CHESTER 

BERGE, EDWARD 

BILOTTI, SALVATORE 
BRENNER, VicToR D. 
BREWSTER, GEORGE IT. 
BusH-Brown, H. K. 
CATDER, A. STIRLING 
CLARK, ALLAN 

CorBetTt, Mrs. GAIL SHERMAN 
CRENIER, HENRI 

mein, |. E. 

DE FRANCISCI, ANTHONY 
DERUJINSKY, GLEB 
ITerscH, ©. PERCIVAL 
DONATO, GIUSEPPE 
EBERLE, ABASTENIA ST. L. 
ELLERHUSEN, ULrRiIc HENRY 
FRASER, JAMES E. 

FRASER, Mrs. LAURA GARDIN 
FRENCH, DANIEL C. 
FRISHMUTH, HARRIET W. 
Fry, SHERRY E. 

Fucus, EMIL 

GODDARD, RALPH 

GRAFLY, CHARLES 
GREGORY, JOHN 

GRIMES, FRANCES 
GUDEBROD, Louis A. 


Xl 


HAMANN, GC. F, 
HEBER, CARL A. 
HERING, HENRY 
HINTON, CHARLES L. 
Hom, Victor S. 
Humpnuriss, C. H. 
Hyatt, ANNA V. 
JAEGERS, ALBERT 
JAEGERS, AUGUSTUS 
JENKINS, F. Lynn 
JENNEWEIN, C. PAUL 
JOHNSON, Grace Mott 
KALDENBERG, F. R. 
KECK, CHARLES 
KEYSER, EPHRAIM 
KEYSER, E. W. 
KontTI, ISIDORE 
LAESSLE, ALBERT 
LAWRIE, LEE O. 
LENTELLI, LEO 
LoOBER, GEORG J. 
LONGMAN, E. B. 
LUKEMAN, AUGUSTUS 
IWEAGNE Tine tle. 


MacNeEIL, Mrs. Caror B. 


MALDARELLI, LAWRENCE 
MANSHIP, PAUL 
MATZEN, HERMAN 
McCartTAN, EDWARD 
MILLer, J. MAXWELL 
NADELMAN, ELIE 
NEWMAN, ALLEN G. 
INTE HAUS @ ers 
PACKER IE. ar. 


SiC UNsPalO Revie uVeB ER SG aN aaleN aaa 


PATIGIAN, SELATG 

PerrY, R. HINTON 
PoLASEK, ALBIN 
POTTER Ee 
PROCTOR. #2: 
PUTNAM, ARTHUR 
PUTNAM, BRENDA 
QuINN, EpMmonp T. 
RHIND, J. MASSEY 
Ricci, ULysseEs 

Rotu, FREDERICK G. R. 
RUGKSTULI Loewe 
SALEMME, ANTONIO 
SALVATORE, VICTOR D. 
SANFORD, EDWARD FIELD 
SCARPITTA, CARTAINO 


AS 30 CilAmM ewe Ostet dear 


ANGELA, EMILIO 
BRACKEN, Mrs. CLIio 
CADORIN, ETTORE 
DuFFy, RICHARD H. 
GRUPPE, KARL 
HAMMER, IT RYGVE 
HERZEL, PAUL 
HowLanp, EDITH 
ILLAVA, KARL 
Juszko, JEAN 
KILENYI, JULIO 
Lapp, Mrs. ANNA COLEMAN 


Lawson-PEAcEY, Mrs. Jess M. 


LENz, ALFRED DAVID 


Xll 


SCHAAF, ANTON 

SCHULER, HANS 
SCHWARZOTT, M. M. 
SCHWEIZER, J. OTTO 
SCUDDER, JANET 
SPICER-SIMSON, IHEODORE 
St. LANNE, LoulIs 

TAFT, LorRADO 

VONNOH, Mrs. BEssIE POTTER 
WALKER, NELLIE V. 
WALTER, EDGAR 
WEINERT, ALBERT 
WEINMAN, A. A. 
YANDELL, ENID 

Younc, MAHonrI M. 
ZIMM, BRUNO LOUIS 


MEM Bie 


McKenzig, Dr. R. Tair 

MOoRAHAN, EUGENE 

NEANDROSS, SIGURD 

NovELLI, JAMES 

Pappock, WILLARD D. 

Parsons, Mrs. EpitH BARETTO 

PouPELET, MLLE. JANE 

RENIER, JOSEPH 

RipLey, Mrs. Lucy PERKINS 

SHONNARD, EUGENIE F. 

STERLING, Mrs. 
Morris 

WHITNEY, Mrs. GERTRUDE V. 

WRIGHT, ALICE MORGAN 


LINDSEY . 


NAC O UNE ieee GC UeP EU RES © CLE T Y 


eam bee VIC Bakes 


ApAMs, Epwarp D. 
ADAMS, Mrs. HERBERT 
AGAR, JOHN G. 
ALMIRALL, RAYMOND F. 
ARMOUR, GEORGE A. 
Bacon, HENRY 
BARBER, DONN 
Beatty, W. GEDNEY 
BENNETT, Mrs. Louis 
Betts, SAMUEL R. 
Buiiss, WILLIAM H. 
BLUMENTHAL, GEORGE 
BRUNNER, ARNOLD W. 
BuTLER, MAXWELL E. 
CASEY, EDWARD P. 
CHADBOURNE, WILLIAM M. 
SrArke Ww. A. 

CLARKE, THOMAS B. 
mroucd, Virs. C. P. A. 
@ocHran, Dr. G. D. 
G@G6EFIN, C. A. 

CoLe, Epwarp F. 
COoLLINs, FRANK 
CorRBETT, HARVEY WILEY 
COTTRELL, W.. L. 

DE Forest, RoBert W. 
DE Kay, CHARLES 
DRUMMOND, I. W. 
DURKEE, EUGENE W. 
EBERLEIN, CHARLES Woop 
ELLSwortnH, J]. W. 
EMERSON, G. H. 

Forp, JAMES B. 
FRIEDLANDER, J. H. 


Xill 


ERISSEL Ao: 

GARRETT, ROBERT 
GELLATLY, JOHN 

GILBERT, Cass 
GREENOUGH, JOHN 
HARLAN, EpGAR R. 
HARRIMAN, Mrs. E. H. 
HARRIS, VICTOR 

Hart, WILLIAM Howarpb 
Hart, Mrs. Percy GRIER 
HaAsBROuUCK, ELSA 
HETZLER, THEODORE 
Ho_Lter, Mrs. SARAH 
HORNBOSTEL, H. F. 
HupNuT, ALEXANDER 
Hunt, JosEPH HOWLAND 
EG Nia eile 
HUNTINGTON, ARCHER M. 
AUELCHISON a Cemlae 

KeELLy, THOMAS H. 
KENNEDY, _E. G. 

Kinc, RALPH T. 
KOHLMAN, Mrs. Rena T. 
Kouns, LEE 

Kunz, GEORGE F. 

[EAN CHa Coa x 

LANDONE, BROWN 
LEHMAIER, L. 
MAGONIGLE, H. VAN BUREN 
MANSFIELD, HOwARD 
MARQUAND, ALLAN 
MITCHELL, JOSEPH 
Moore, JOHN CHANDLER 
Murray, Mrs. Huacu A. 


NC We ee eer SOR GON AP ORC. AD, 


NISBET. Rea nla 
OsBorRN, W. C. 
PARMELEE, JAMES 
PHILLIPS, WILLIAM H. 
Pre Pau 

Post, ABRAM S. 
Pratt, GEoRGE D. 
PRATT erlAROLD™ Ll. 
PRATIONVI RSS LLAROLD EL: 
Purpy, W. FRANK 
RENWICK, W. W. - 
RicH, CHARLES A. 
ROBINSON, EDWARD 
Ross, ALBERT R. 
RYAN, JOHN BARRY 
SCHILLINGER Are. 
SHAW, SAMUEL IT. 
SKOUGAARD, JENS 
SPENCER, NELSON E. 


XIV 


SOURED: 

STARR, LOUIS avi) 
STERNER, ALBERT 
STEWART, ALBERT |. 
STEWART, WILLIAM R. 
TAYLOR, WILLIAM N. 
TiBFANY a LeOUIseG: 
TUCKERMAN, ALFRED 
‘TUCKERMAN, PAUL 
Ty_Ler, Mrs. ERNEsT F. 
WALTHAUSEN, HERMAN 
WARD SG 

WARD, JOHN GILBERT 
WARNER, JOHN DE WITT 
WATERBURY, JOHN I. 
WEIL, FELIX 

WEIL, HENRI 
WEITLING, WILLIAM W. 
WILLING, RICHARD 


CATALOGUE 


ve 
fy 
e* 


“7 


Raw Ors -AIb. BATE 


PAOLO S. ABBATE was born in Villarosa, Italy, in 1884. 
He received his education in Italy and the United States. 

MemBeERSHIP: International Fine Arts Society, president; Dante 
League of America, director. 

Works: Dante monument, Newburgh, N. Y.; Fiat Voluntas Tua, 
Brown University, Providence, R. I.; People Without Vision Perish, 
terra cotta, Evangelical Church, Cliffside Park, N. J.; busts—, Pro- 
fessor L. Carnovale, Stilo, Italy; Hortense Husserl, Dr. Husserl Col- 
lection, Newark, N. J.; Enrico Caruso, New York City; Dante monu- 
ment, Providence, R. I.; Ruvolo memorial, Torrington, Conn.; David, 
monument to Joyce Kilmer, to be erected in France. 


HERBERT ADAMS 


HERBERT ADAMS was born in Concord, Vermont, in 1858. 
He was a pupil of the Massachusetts Normal Art School, and studied 
for five years in Paris under Mercié and others. 

Honors: honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1883 ; gold medal, Philadel- 
phia Art Club, 1892; gold medals, Charleston Exposition, 1902, and 
Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; hors concours, 
Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; medal of honor, 
Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 1915; gold 
medal, New York Architectural League, 1916; Elizabeth N. Watrous 
gold medal, National Academy of Design, 1916. 

MeEmBERSHIP: American Academy of Arts and Letters; National 
Academy of Design, academician; New York Municipal Art Com- 
mission; Federal Commission of Fine Arts; National Sculpture 
Society, charter member and president, two terms. 

Works: Fountain, Fitchburg, Mass.; Pratt memorial, Emmanuel 
Baptist Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Hoyt memorial, Judson Memorial 
Church, New York City; bronze doors, statue of Joseph Henry and 
other works, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C.; Joseph Smith, 
Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pa.; W. E. Channing, Boston, Mass.; 
bronze doors and marble tympanum, St. Bartholomew’s Church, New 
York; Matthias Baldwin, Philadelphia, Pa.; Gen. Joseph Hawley me- 
morial, State Capitol, Hartford, Conn.; A. A. Humphreys, Fredericks- 
burg, Va.; Michigan State monument, Vicksburg National Military 
Park, Vicksburg, Miss.; John Marshall, Rufus Ranney, Simon de Mont- 
fort and Stephen Langton, County Court House, Cleveland, Ohio; 
statues, Painting, Sculpture, Oratory, Philosophy, Brooklyn Museum, 
Brooklyn; MacMillan Fountain, Washington, D. C.; William Cul- 
len Bryant, Bryant Park, New York City; Welch memorial, Theo- 
logical Seminary, Auburn, N. Y.; portrait relief, Joseph Choate, 
Union League Club, New York; portrait bust, Julia Marlowe, Cleve- 
land Museum, Cleveland, O.; bust, Jeunesse, in pink Milanese mar- 
ble, Metropolitan Museum, New York, and other works. 


A NORDIC TYPE BY HERBERT ADAMS 


COMRADES IN ARMS BY ROBERT I. AITKEN 


ims Sse am eee ele KEEN 


Kio Bekele KE Newaseborn in San Francisco, Cal) in 
1878. Hestudied at the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art, San Francis- 
co, under Arthur Matthews and Douglas Tilden. He was professor’ 
of sculpture at the Mark Hopkins Institute, 1901-1904, and worked 
in Paris, 1904-1907. He was formerly instructor in sculpture at the 
Art Students League, and is at present instructor at the National 
Academy of Design. 

Honors: Phelan gold medal for sculpture; Helen Foster Barnett 
prize, National Academy of Design, 1908, for the G. R. Clark monu- 
ment, University of Virginia, Richmond, Va.; gold medal of honor for 
sculpture, New York Architectural League, 1915; silver medal for 
sculpture, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 
Calif., 1915; Elizabeth N. Watrous gold medal, National Academy of 
Design, 1921. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society, 1902; National Acade- 
my of Design, academician, 1914; National Sculpture Society (ex- 
president); New York Architectural League; National Institute of 
Arts and Letters. 

Works: busts—, Mme. Modjeska, Douglas Tilden, Dr. J. L. York, 
C. J. Dickman, Charles Rollo Peters, Augustus Thomas, David 
Warfield, R. F. Outcault, George Bellows, ex-President Taft, Henry 
Arthur Jones ; monuments—, to William McKinley at St. Helena, Calif., 
1902, Berkeley, Calif., 1902, and Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, 
1903; to Bret Harte, 1904, to Hall McAllister, 1904, and to the Ameri- 
can Navy, San Francisco, Calif.; Tired Mercury; Dancing Faun; Bur- 
rill memorial, New Britain, Conn.; George Rogers Clark monument, 
University of Virginia, Richmond, Va.; doors for Greenhut and John 
W. Gates Mausoleums, Woodlawn cemetery, New York; The Foun- 
tain of the Earth and The Four Elements, Panama-Pacific Exposition, 
1915. He designed the $50 gold piece for this exposition and the 
half-dollar for the Missouri Centennial, 1921. 


GATE ETEH ANS A are 


CARL ETHAN AKELEY was born in Claredon, N. Y., in 
1864. He was associated with the Field Museum, Chicago, III., 


from 1895-1909, and has been with the American Museum of Natural 
History since 1909. 

MemMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architectur- 
al League; National Institute of Social Science; Franklin Institute; 
New York Zodlogical Society. 

Works: Two animal studies in the Brooklyn Institute; numerous 
groups in the American Museum of Natural History. 


THE WOUNDED COMRADE BY CARL E. AKELEY 


GOOSE BOY BY EMILIO ANGELA 


LAGE ede) a iabgea 


Lovurse ALLEN was born in Lowell, Mass. She studied at 
the Rhode Island School of Design and the school of the Boston Mu- 
seum of Fine Arts. 

MeEmBERSHIP: National Association of Women Painters and Sculp- 
tors; Copley Society, Boston, Mass.; Providence Art Club; North 
Shore Arts Association, Gloucester, Mass. 

Works: World War memorial, East Greenwich, R. I.; World War 
tablet, Gloucester, Mass.; memorial tablet, Bancroft Hall, Annapolis, 
Md.; also garden sculptures, ideal bronzes and portraits. 


EMILIO ANGELA 


EMILIO ANGELA was born in Italy, in 1889. He studied at 
Cooper Union, the Art Students League, and the National Academy 
of Design, and was a studio pupil of A. A. Weinman. 

Honors: first prize for composition, and second prize for sculpture, 
National Academy of Design. 

MemBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural 
League; American Federation of Fine Arts. 

Works: The Goose Boy; The Goose Girl; Barking Seals; Baby 
Angela; Boxer; Mirthfulness. 


MARIE APEL 


MaRIE APEL was born in London, England, in 1888. She 
studied sculpture in London and Munich. 

MEMBERSHIP: Société Internationale des Beaux-Arts et des Let- 
tres, Paris. 

Works: bronze portrait statue of Chin Gee Hee, Hong-Kong, 
China; stone spandrel figures, Bagshot Park, England; fountain group 
in stone, England; P. T. Morgan memorial, San Francisco, Calif.; 
Sleicher memorial, Troy, N. Y.; Langdon memorial, Augusta, Ga.; 
Gardner memorial, Easthampton, L. I.; Malo memorial, Denver, Col.; 
marble and bronze fountain, Pasadena, Calif.; Hodges memorial, St. 
Paul’s Church, Baltimore, Md. 


ALBEOR HE NsR YAS SiNes 


ALBERT HENRY ATKINS was born in Milwaukee, Wis. 
He received his early training in the Cowles Art School, Boston, 1896- 
1898, and studied from 1893-1900 at the Julien and Colarossi Acadé- 
mies in Paris. Since 1909 he has been a member of the faculty of the 
Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R. I. 

Honors: silver medal, Milwaukee Art Institute, 1917. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society, 1911; Providence Art 
Club; New York Architectural League; Boston Architectural Club; 
Copley Society, Boston; American Art Association, Paris. 

Works: Copenhagen memorial fountain, Boston, Mass.; Lapham 
memorial, Milwaukee, Wis.; architectural sculptures, Christ Church, 
Ansonia, Conn., All Saints Church, Dorchester, Mass.; World War 
memorial, Roslindale, Mass. He has also done portraits and ideal 
sculptures, fountains and garden sculptures. 


TUSUS, GiRwiy Os ANSE Sl WNC PMEIRIIE Ish; ZVUGONS 


Cat 


aA NSB Ar ale 


LrLL1iAN BAER was born in New York City in 1887. She 
received her artistic training at the Art Students League, working 
under James Earle Fraser from 1908 to 1911, and under Kenneth | 
Hayes Miller from 1918 to 1920. 

Works: The Dance, shown at the International Exhibition at 
Rome, Italy, 1911. Her specialty is statuettes, book-ends, etc. 


NCO ee We ID AE) AeA Ine 


ROBERT P. BAKER was born in London, England, in 
1886. He studied at the Lambeth School of Art, the City and Guild 
Technical Institute and the Royal Academy, London. He also 
studied in Paris and Rome. 

Honors: first medal for portraiture and first medal for sculpture, 
Royal Academy. 

MEMBERSHIP: Chelsea Arts Club, London. 

Works: Forty-two statuettes for the Fifteenth Century stalls, 
Beverly Minster, England; collaborated with Adrian Jones on the 
colossal Quadriga on the Inigo Jones Arch, Hyde Park, London; 
The Soul Struggle, Belgium, The Kiss, and others in the United 
States. 


Cr EO) Re Grits Gr Reyes ARE Ne AGE) 


GEORGE GREY BARNARD was born in Bellefonte, Pa., in 
1863. He was a student at the Art Institute of Chicago, and was a 
pupil of Carlier at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. He exhibited 
at the Paris Salon, 1894. 

Honors: gold medal, International Exposition, Paris, 1900; gold 
medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; gold medal, 
Louisiana-Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904. 

MEMBERSHIP: Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, associate, Paris; 
National Institute of Arts and Letters; Associated Artists of France. 

Works: Iwo Natures, Metropolitan Museum, New York; The 
Great God Pan, Central Park, New York; group of thirty-one statues, 
heroic size, Burden of Life, Work and Brotherhood, etc., State Capi- 
tol, Harrisburg, Pa.; group, Brotherly Love, Norway, Sweden; heroic 
group, Adam and Eve; relief (twenty-two feet high), Labor and Rest; 
group of Baptism; Love and Labor; busts—, Abram S. Hewitt; 
Collis P. Huntington; Dr. Leeds, Stevens Institute Hoboken, N. J.; 
The Hewer; marble group, Adam and Eve, Boston Museum, Boston, 
Mass.; Father and Son, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; The Urn 
of Life, nineteen figures in marble, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; 
Venus and Cupid, Paris, France; bronze statues—Abraham Lincoln, 
Lytle Park, Cincinnati, O., and Manchester, England; memorial 
fountain, Tampa, Fla.; Maidenhood; heroic head, Lincoln, bronze; 
Rising Woman; Brotherhood in Suffering; bronze statue, Lincoln, 
Louisville, Ky.; Adam and Eve, marble group, Tarrytown, N. Y.; 
bronze bas-relief, Conception. 


COLOSSAL HEAD OF LINCOLN BY GEORGE GREY BARNARD 


15 


MADONNA BY CLEMENT J. BARNHORN 


16 


GRE AMIGEN Ge] BARN HiO RN 


Ger MENT Bb “RIN HO RN Was born im Cincinnati, O., in 
1857. He studied at the Académie Julien, Paris, under Bouguereau, 
Peuch, and Mercié. 
_Honors: honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1895; bronze, and silver 
medal, International Exposition, Paris, 1900; honorable mention, 
Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, Louisiana 
Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Cincinnati Art Club. 


Works: Theodore Thomas, Music Hall, Cincinnati, O.; fountain, 
Shortridge Hill School, Indianapolis, Ind.; fountain figure, Prince 


George Hotel, New York City; Magdalen, Cincinnati Art Museum; 
Portrait Bust, Public Library, Cincinnati, O.; Madonna and Child, 
Cathedral facade, Covington, Ky.; eleven panels, Court House, 
Cincinnati, O.; five panels—war memorials, Hughes High School, 
Cincinnati, O.; portrait, Maj. C. R. Holmes, Cincinnati General Hos- 
pital; bas-relief, Dr. P. S. Connor, Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincin- 
nati, O.; Maenads, relief panel, Queen City Club, Cincinnati, O.; 
fountains, Hughes High School, and Conservatory of Music, Cincin- 
nati, O.; fountain figure, Hartford, Conn. 


Meas) PEL NB AGB ARSE Ee Toh 


MADELEINE A. BARTLETT was born in Woburn, Mass. 
She began the study of sculpture at Cowles Art School, Boston, re- 
maining there one year under the instruction of Henry H. Kitson. 
After leaving the school, she continued to study for ten years under 
the same instructor. 
MEMBERSHIP: Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts. 
Works: She has made a specialty of small bas-reliefs. 


PAUL WAYLAND BARTLETT 


PAUL WAYLAND BARTLETT was born in New Haven, 
Conn., in 1865. He began the study of sculpture as a boy under 
Frémiet, and exhibited a bust of his grandmother in the Paris Salon 
at the age of fourteen. In 1880, he was a pupil of Cavelier at the 
Ecole des Beaux-Arts. He studied animal forms at the Jardin des 
Plantes with Frémiet, and later worked with Rodin. He studied 
pottery sculpture with Carrier, and became interested in bronze cast- 
ing, and had a foundry of his own where he produced some small 
bronzes, fine alloys and patines. A collection of these bronzes is 1n 
the Luxembourg Museum. 

Honors: honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1887, for the Bear Tamer, 
Metropolitan Museum, New York; hors concours, Paris Exposition, 
1889, and member, International Jury of Awards; gold medal, Pan- 
American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; grand prize, St. Louis 
Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; first medal, Liége Exposition, 1905; 
Chevalier of the Legion of Honor, 1895 and Officer, 1908. 

MEMBERSHIP: American Academy of Arts and Letters; American 
Art Association of Paris, (acting president); Institute of France, cor- 
responding member; Royal Academy of Belgium, associate; National 
Academy of Design, academician, 1917. 

Works: statue, Gen. Joseph Warren, Boston, Mass.; Puritans, 
State Capitol, Hartford, Conn.; six decorative figures, New York 
Public Library; equestrian statue, Lafayette, Paris; Reading Figure 
and Erect Figure, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, 
Pa.; plaster, Boy with Garlands, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, 
Ill.; statues, Columbus and Michelangelo, Library of Congress, 
Washington, D. C.; pediment, House of Representatives, Washing- 
ton, D. C.; statues—, Patriotism, Duluth, Minn.; Benjamin Franklin, 
Waterbury, Conn.; Alexander Agassiz, Boston, Mass.; Robert Morris, 
Philadelphia, Pa.; door for tomb of Senator W. A. Clark, Woodlawn 
Cemetery, N. Y. 


ROBERT MORRIS BY PAUL BARTLETT 


19 


w a : ia can ci : x ot S 
THE GLINT OF THE SEA BY CHESTER] BEAGH 


20 


(abel he BEA GE 


CHESTER BEACH was born in San Francisco, Calif., in 1881. 
He studied for several years in Paris under Verlet and Roland and in 
Rome. | 

Honors: Helen Foster Barnett prize, National Academy of Design, 
1909; silver medal, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, 1915; 
prize for the best work of art, National Arts Club, 1922. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate; National 
Sculpture Society; New York Architectural League; National In- 
stitute of Arts and Letters; American Numismatic Society. 

Works: Sacred Fire, marble statue; Head in gray marble; Crying 
Baby, marble head; Wave Head; Baby Head, marble; Beyond, mar- 
ble figure; garden figures in bronze and marble; busts of children. 
He works in a great variety of materials, marble, bronze, terra-cotta 
and ivory, and has done a number of architectural works in bronze, 
marble, and cement. 


21 


BEA oD: baNINialer 


BELLE BENNETT was born in New York City in 1900. 
She studied two years under Solon Borglum and is now a student at 
the School of American Sculpture. 


EDD WAR DSB BRIG 


EDWARD BERGE was born in Baltimore, Md., in 1876. He 
studied at the Maryland Institute, the Rinehart School of Sculpture, 
Baltimore, Md.; the Académie Julien and under Verlet and Rodin, in 
Paris. 

Honors: bronze medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 
1901; bronze medal, and gold medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 
St. Louis, Mo., 1904; bronze medal, Santiago Exposition, South 
America 1910; bronze medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposi- 
tion, San Francisco, Cal., 1915; Clark prize, American Art Associa- 
tion, Paris. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Charcoal Club; Nation- 
al Arts Club. 

Works: Watson monument, and Tattersall monument, Baltimore, 
Md.; Pieta, St. Patrick’s Church, Washington, D. C.; The Scalp, 
Museum of Honolulu, H. I.; Gist memorial, Charleston, S. C.; Latrobe 
and Armistead monuments, Baltimore, Md.; On the Trail, an Indian 
memorial, Clifton Park, Baltimore, Md.; memorials—, Rev. Wynne 
Jones, Thomas Hayes, Baltimore, Md.; garden and fountain figures; 
garden figure, Wild Flower, Melbourne, Australia. 


22 


SEA URCHIN BY EDWARD BERGE 


23 


LORSOPBY SSALVA TORE Mas BILbO iil 


24 


ENEA BIAFORA 


ENEA BIAFORA was born in St.Giovanni in Fiore in Southern 
Italy, in 1892. He studied under his father, a sculptor and architect. 
In 1907 he went to Naples and studied at the Istituto di Belle Arti. ° 
He was professor of drawing in the technical and normal schools of 
Italy. In 1914 he came to New York and later worked in the studio 
of Paul Manship. 

Honors: a first prize and traveling scholarship at the Institute of 
Fine Arts, Naples. 

Works: The Little Centauress, National Academy of Design Exhi- 
bition, 1922. 


Seen Oot ere BLEOT Tl 


SALVATORE F. BILOTTI was born in Cosenza, Italy, in 
1880. Hestudied in Philadelphia, Paris and Rome, being successively 
a pupil of Charles Grafly, Injalbert and Verlet. 

Honors: Cresson travelling scholarships, Pennsylvania Academy 
of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pa., 1906-1907; collaborative prize, New 
York Architectural League, 1914. 

MEMBERSHIP: New York Architectural League; National Sculp- 
ture Society. 

Works: marble statue, Our Lady of Lourdes, Chapel of the Little 
Sisters of the Poor, New York. The Art Museum of St. Louis, Mo., 
contains examples of his works. His specialty is portrait busts and 
statuettes. 


25 


CAO OUND sHOMREG SLICE | 


Gutzon BorGLuMwas born in Idaho, in 1867. Hestudied 
in San Francisco, and went to Paris in 1890 where he attended the 
Académie Julien and the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. He has exhibited 
as painter and sculptor in London and Paris where he resided for 
long periods. 

Honors: gold medal, Western Art Association; gold medal, Louis- 
lana-Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904. 

MEMBERSHIP: Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, associate; New 
York Architectural League; Royal Society of British Artists. 

Works: Gen. Phil Sheridan monument, Washington, D. C.; 
twelve apostles, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York; colossal 
head of Abraham Lincoln, rotunda of Capitol, Washington, D. C.; 
Mares of Diomedes, and Ruskin, Metropolitan Museum, New York; 
statue of Lincoln, Newark, N. J.; Henry Ward Beecher, Brooklyn, 
N. Y.; marble figures—, Conception; Babes in the Woods; The 
Centaurs; Wonderment of Motherhood; Orpheus and Eurydice; 
Lucretia; ‘I have piped unto you and you have not danced ’’; Prayer; 
Martyr; gargoyles, dormitory, class of ’79, Princeton University, 
Princeton, N. J.; colossal bronze equestrian statue of Sheridan, Chi- 
cago, Ill.; colossal group, forty-two heroic figures in bronze, Newark, 
N. J.; now producing a colossal bas-relief of seven hundred feet by one 
hundred feet, on the face of Stone Mountain, near Atlanta, Ga., in- 
volving several hundred figures. 


26 


THE POT OF BASIL BY GUTZON BORGLUM 


27 


ROUGH RIDER BY SOLON BORGLUM 


28 


SOLON HANNIBAL BORGLUM* 


SOLON HANNIBAL BORGLUM was born in Ogden, Utah, in 
1868 and died in 1922. He studied at the Art Academy, Cincinnati, 
Ohio, and under Rebisso and Frémiet in Paris. He made a specialty 
of Western life, living among Indians and cowboys. 

Honors: honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1899; silver medal, Pan- 
American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; gold medal, Louisiana Pur- 
chase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; silver medal, Buenos Aires 
Exposition, 1910. 

MemMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society, 1901; National Academy 
of Design, academician, 1911. 

Works: Equestrian statue of Gen. John B. Gordon, Atlanta, Ga.; 
equestrian statue of Capt. O’Neil, Prescott, Ariz.; Backus memorial, 
Packer Institute, Brooklyn, N. Y.; portrait relief, Brig.-Gen. Joseph 
A. Mower, Vicksburg battlefield, Vicksburg, Miss.; Soldiers and Sail- 
ors monument, Danbury, Conn.; Hurley monument, Topeka, Kan.; 
Border of White Man’s Land, and Bulls Fighting, Metropolitan 
Museum of Art, New York; bust of C. A. Shieren, Brooklyn Institute 
Museum, Brooklyn, N. Y.; The Pioneer, Panama-Pacific Internation- 
al Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; Inspiration, Aspiration, 
Little Lady of the Dews, Church of St. Marks in the Bouwerie, New 
York City; Indian Mourners; five colossal busts of generals of the 
Civil War, Vicksburg National Park, Vicksburg, Miss. 


* Deceased. 


footer nebORKOW SKE BROULTON 


Jos—EPH LORKOWSKI BOULTON (Joseph M. Lore), was 
born in Ft. Worth, Texas, in 1896. He studied at the National Aca- 
demy of Design, the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, and was for six 
years in the studio of Hermon A. MacNeil. 

Honors: Helen Foster Barnett prize, National Academy of Design. 
MEMBERSHIP: League of American Artists. 
Works: The Devil Dog; Song of the Sea; The Prairie Fire; Faith, 
Hope and Charity. 
29 


Vl Gaie@). Ras sey sistoe BRS BONSN ete 


Victor DAviIpD BRENNER was born in Shavely, Russia, 
in 1871, and started as a die-cutter, 1893; he went to Paris in 1898, and 
became a pupil of Louis Oscar Roty, 1898-1901, and also of the Acad- 
émie Julien, under Peuch, Verlet and Dubois. 

Honors: bronze medal, Paris Exposition, 1900; honorable mention, 
Paris Salon, 1900; bronze medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 
N. Y., 1901; silver medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; gold medal, Universal Exposition, Brussels, Belgium, 1910; 
silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 
Calif., 1915; J. Sanford Saltus silver medal of the American Numis- 
matic Society, for achievement in medallic art, 1922. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architec- 
tural League; National Arts Club; American Numismatic Society. 

Works: Schenley memorial fountain, Pittsburgh, Pa.; set of medals, 
Metropolitan Museum, N. Y.; plaques—, Carl Schurz; Collis P. 
Huntington; Fridtjof Nansen; J. Sanford Saltus; James McNeill 
Whistler; John Paul Jones; Abraham Lincoln Centennial; medals—, 
C. P. Daly prize medal for research, American Geographical Society, 
N. Y.; George William Curtis; J. Sanford Saltus award medal, Nation- 
al Academy of Design; Panama Canal; New York Historical Society 
Centennial; Abraham Lincoln; Samuel Putnam Avery; Theodore 
Roosevelt; Ambrose Swasey; John Hay; Twenty-fifth Anniversary 
Clark University; Wilbur and Orville Wright, Aero Club of America; 
and numerous other plaques and medals. He also designed the 
modelitor:thesU = scent e100; 


30 


UTS aie Oms RAN ES 


OLYMPIO BRINDESI!I was born in the Abruzzi, Italy, in 
1897. He studied at the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, and worked 
under Chester Beach and A. Phimister Proctor. : 

Works: marble figure, Desolation; he has done animal and human 
figures in marble. 


eM Ne, 16 MIDHOM RC By 


ETTORE CADORIN was born in Venice, Italy. He began 
his artistic education with his father, also a sculptor, at the Academy 
of Fine Arts of Venice, where he received two first medals and a prize 
of money to be used for a voyage of instruction to the different capitals 
of Europe. His master was Dal Zotto, the celebrated sculptor and 
anatomist. Later on he resided in Paris and exhibited bronzes at 
the Salon of the Société des Beaux-Arts, and exhibited bas-reliefs in 
ivory at the Galerie Georges Petit. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Two large statues in Istrian marble for the celebrated 
Libreria di Sansovino, in Venice, to replace those which had been 
destroyed by the falling of the Campanile of St. Marks; a memorial 
in marble to Wagner for the Palace where Wagner died; a memorial 
to Benedetto Marcello for the Conservatorium of Music in Venice; 
several monuments for the cemeteries of Venice, Paris, Budapest, 
Bukarest, Holland, etc., and in this country for Woodlawn Cemetery, 
N.Y. One of his recent works is a War memorial for Edgewater, N. J. 


Ake Soles HEN Gre AC LE Oia 


ALEXANDER STIRLING CALDER, theson of Alexander 
Milne Calder, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., in 1870. He studied at 
the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and under Chapu and 
Falguiére in Paris, France. He is instructor in the National Acad- 
emy of Design and the Art Students League of New York, and was 
Acting Chief, Department of Sculpture, at the Panama-Pacific Inter- 
national Exposition, in 1915. 

Honors: Gold medal of the Philadelphia Art Club, 1893; honor- 
able mention at the Pan-American Exposition at Buffalo, 1901; a 
silver medal at the St. Louis Exposition, 1904; the Walter Lippincott 
prize, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1905; grand prize, Alaska- 
Yukon-Pacific Exposition, 1909. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society, 1896; Philadelphia Art 
Club; Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; Fairmount Park Art 
Association, Philadelphia, Pa.; National Academy of Design, academi- 
cian, 1913; National Institute of Arts and Letters; New York Archi- 
tectural League, 1910; New York Municipal Art Society; National 
Arts Club; League of New York Artists. 

Works: statues of Witherspoon, Marcus Whitman and Davies, 
Presbyterian Building, Philadelphia, Pa.; marble sundial, Fairmount 
Park, Philadelphia, Pa.; monumental archways, Throop Institute, 
Pasadena, Calif.; Lea Memorial, Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, 
Pa.; Triumph of Energy, etc., Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Fran- 
cisco, 1915; The Star, John Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis, Ind.; 
Washington Group, Washington Arch, New York City; Depew mem- 
orial fountain, Indianapolis, Ind.; The Island, Viscaya, Fla. 


32 


GIRL WITH BLACK SWAN BY A. STIRLING CALDER 


33 


MME. AMELITA GALLI-CURCI BY ALLAN CLARK 


34 


DUANE CHAMPLAIN 


DUANE CHAMPLAIN was born in Black Mountain, North 
Carolina, in 1889. He studied at the Art Students League, the 
National Academy of Design and the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, 
New York. 


ALLAN CLARK 


ALLAN CLARK was bornin Missoula, Montana, in 1896. He 
studied under Albin Polasek at the Art Institute of Chicago, and 
under Robert Aitken at the National Academy of Design, New York. 
He is instructor at the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 
Works: bronze statue, Ted Shawn’s Antelope Dance; marble bust, 
Mme. Galli-Curci. 


MAC ae ON KOT EN.G 


MABEL CONKLING was born in Boothbay, Maine, in 1871. 
She studied drawing at the Académie Julien in Paris under Bouguereau 
in 1895, and at the Académie Vitti under Collin until 1899. In 1900 
she studied sculpture under MacMonnies. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Association of Women Painters and 
Sculptors; American Federation of Arts; American Numismatic 
Society. 

Works: Vase of the Four Winds; The Lotus Girl; Song of the Sea; 
Temptation; Romance; In the Sun; Bacchante; Elf Dance; Nymph 
and Satyr (terminals); Nymph panels for swimming pool; portrait- 
reliefs—, Miss Springtime; Rev. Dr. George Alexander; William H. 
Wadhams, Jr.; Mrs. James A. Garland; Hope Garland; Pauline. 


2 


PAWS a OON aIatENEGs 


PAUL GONKLING was born in New York City in 1871. He 
studied at the Kensington School of Art, South Kensington, London, 
and in Paris at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and in the studios of Fal- 
guiére and MacMonnies. 

MEMBERSHIP: Society of American Artists; Society of Independent 
Artists. His specialty 1s portraiture. 


eB erase Eg PACHOROM: Ye da: 


ELIZABETH COOPER was born in Dayton, O.,in 1901. She 
studied under Sally James Farnham and at the American School of 
Sculpture. 

Works: relief, Hugh L. Cooper. She makes a specialty of animals. 


ELEPHANT CHILD BYSELIZAR E Tie GOoORilnk 


36 


GUANIUb, Sins ROWAN CKOM RU bile Jee 


GAIL SHERMAN CORBETT was born in Syracuse, N. Y. 
She began to study modeling with Caroline Peddle (Ball), and after- 
wards studied at the Art Students League as a pupil of Augustus’ 
Saint-Gaudens, H. Siddons Mowbray and George de Forest Brush. 
She taught drawing and modeling for two years at Syracuse Univer- 
sity. From 1898 to 1899 she was in Paris working under the guidance 
of Saint-Gaudens, and at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. 

Honors: honorable mention for sculpture, and bronze medal for 
medals, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 
FO15: 

MemBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; American Numismatic 
Society; National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: Hamilton S. White memorial, and Kirkpatrick memorial 
fountain, Syracuse, N. Y.; tablet to Dean Vernon, Syracuse Univer- 
sity, and bust of Dr. Calthrop, May Memorial Church, Syracuse, N. 
Y.; bronze doors for Auditorium, Municipal Building and Tower, and 
large bronze zodiac and compass in front of Tower, Springfield, Mass. ; 
garden fountains, sun-dials and low relief portraits. 


ai 


IDA COSTIGAN 


IpA COSTIGAN was born in Germany in 1894. She came to 
the United States at an early age. She is self taught. She showed 
a piece called Old Annie at the National Academy of Design in 1922, 
and has exhibited at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 


MARKETING BY IDA COSTIGAN 


38 


Le TODIN BM Ts BY {Cane asi de) 


LEONARD CRASKE was born in London, England, in 1882. 
He was educated at the City of London School and London Univer- 
sity. For three years he studied medicine, including anatomy, at' 
St. Thomas’ Hospital, London. Later he studied art with the Dick- 
sees, and served as assistant to Paul R. Montford. He came to Amer- 
ica In 1910 and has since made his home in Boston and Gloucester. 
He has exhibited at the Royal Academy, London, and elsewhere. 


Sil Oven © ES eae Baas le ie ON ARO RG RIAs Ke) 


39 


Pit Ral Rec Nea 


HENRI CRENIER was born in Paris, France, in 1873. He 
was a pupil of Falguiére at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. 

Honors: Honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1897, and Panama- 
Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architec- 
tural League. 

Works: Boy and Turtle, bronze, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 
New York; pediments and caryatids, City Hall, San Francisco, 
Calif.; Fenimore Cooper memorial, Scarsdale, N. Y.; Girl and Butter- 
flies, bronze sun-dial; fountains; caryatids; Spirit of the Garden, 
marble statue; Youth and Shepherd, stone; Source, marble,—all on 
private estate. 


MARGARET PRENCH GC Rin sas 


MARGARET FRENCH CRESSON Was born In Concord: 
Mass., in 1889. She studied sculpture with her father, Daniel Chester 
French, and with Miss Eberle; also at the New York School of Applied 
Design for Women. 

Works: portrait relief of Mr. Murdock to be erected at the Mas- 


sachusetts State Normal School, North Adams, Mass. 


40 


GIRL WITH THE CURLS BY MARGARET FRENCH CRESSON 


41 


IHE LAST ARROW BY GYRUS 


42 


Ee DO AELN 


nee 


GYRUS *ED WIN DALLEIN 


Cyrus Epwin DALLIN was born in Springville, Utah, in 
1861. He was a pupil at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and the Académie 
Julien, Paris, and studied under Chapu and Dampt. Heis instructor « 
in sculpture at the Massachusetts State Normal Art School. 

Honors: gold medal, American Art Association, 1888; honorable 
mention, Paris Salon, 1890; first-class medal, World’s Columbian 
Exposition, Chicago, IIl., 1893; silver medal, International Exposition, 
Paris, 1900, and Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; gold 
medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo. 1904, and Pan- 
ama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; gold 
medal, Paris Salon, 1900. 

MempsersuipP: National Sculpture Society; National Academy of 
Design, associate; National Institute of Arts and Letters. 

Works: Pioneer monument, Salt Lake City, Utah; Signal of Peace, 
Lincoln Park, Chicago; Sir Isaac Newton, Library of Congress, 
Washington, D. C.; Medicine Man, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, 
Pa.; Soldiers and Sailors monument, Syracuse, N. Y.; Appeal to the 
Great Spirit, and Julia Ward Howe, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 
Mass.; The Scout, Kansas City, Mo.; Massasoit, Plymouth, Mass.; 
Signing the Compact, Provincetown, Mass.; Alma Mater, Washing- 
ton University, St. Louis, Mo. He has specialized in the American 
Indian. 


43 


JO DAVIDSON 


Jo DavipbSsoON was born in New York, in 1883. He was a 
pupil of George de Forest Brush and Hermon A. MacNeil. He 
studied at the Art Students League, New York, and the Ecole des 
Beaux-Arts, Paris. 

Works: bust of Feodor Chaliapine; panel of dancing figures, Neigh- 
borhood Playhouse, New York City; busts—, Marshal Joffre, Cle- 
menceau, Gen. John J. Pershing, Anatole France, Emile Coué; figure, 
Gertrude Stein; bronze heads—, Joseph Conrad; Bernard Baruch; 
figure, Ida Rubenstein; bronze statuette, Japanese girl; marble head, 
The Artist’s Wife; bronze statuette, Supplication. 


44 


PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST'S WIFE BY JO DAVIDSON 


45 


THE DAWNING HOUR BY ANTHONY DE FRANCISCI 


40 


ON Gle ONY DE ERAN GIS Gl 


ANTHONY DE FRANCISCI was born in Italy, in 1887. He 
started his early studies abroad and completed them in New York 
City. He was a pupil of George T. Brewster at Cooper Union and of | 
James Earle Fraser at the Art Students League. He was formerly 
assistant in the studios of G. T. Brewster, Philip Martiny, H. A. 
MacNeil, Charles Niehaus and A. A. Weinman. In the latter studio 
he had a very complete technical training for a period of six years. 
He is instructor in modelling at the school of architecture of Columbia 
University, and at the evening classes of the Beaux-Arts Institute. 

Honors: won the Mrs. H. P. Whitney “‘War”’ competition; honor- 
able mention for sculpture, New York Architectural League, 1910. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architectural 
League, American Numismatic Society. 

Works: garden sculpture, Short Hills, N. J.; life-size polychrome 
triptychs for the altar of All Souls Church, New York; life-size garden 
figures, Cleveland, Ohio; At Play; Faith; The Bayadére, a bronze, 
Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio. 


alee eel teal) | Ns Key 


GLEB DERUJINSKy was born in 1888 in the government 
of Smolensk, Central Russia. He began his studies at the age of 
sixteen at the School for the Encouragement of Art, Petrograd. 
Later, he went to Paris and studied with Injalbert and Verlet. 
In 1913 he entered the Imperial Academy which he finished in 1917. 
Although a candidate for the Prix de Rome of the American Academy, 
Rome, Italy, he was unable to complete his competitive work on ac- 
count of the Russian Bolshevik revolution, and went to the Crimea in 
southern Russia where he worked for Prince Felix Youssoupoff. 
After the collapse of Denikin in the spring of 1919, he enrolled as a 
sailor on a Russian cargo vessel and came to the United States in 
June, 1919. At the National Academy of Design he exhibited in 
the winter of 1922, the following works: Alexander Zilot, Leonardo da 
Vinci. 

47 


GCOS PP EAD ON AgE® 


GIUSEPPE DONATO was bornin Maida, Calabria, Italy, in 
1881. He studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts under 
Charles Grafly. He worked also in Paris at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts 
and at the Académies Julien and Colarossi, and as a pupil of Auguste 
Rodin. 

Honors: Edmund Stewardson scholarship, 1900, and Cresson Euro- 
pean scholarship, 1903-1905, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architectural 
League; American Art Association, Paris; Société Internationale des 
Beaux-Arts et des Lettres; American Federation of Fine Arts; 
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. 

Works: The Quaker, City Hall, Philadelphia, Pa. 


48 


PENN eV O11 GE se OLesitr Ean l ORG See yeuG LCS Espa) @ NAS © 


49 


PENelesld Tiere Real Get 


Hunt DIEDERICH was born in Hungary in 1884. He 
studied sculpture in Philadelphia, Pa., Rome and Paris. 
Works: Three Horse fountain; Greyhounds. 
His specialty is animals and figures for monuments. 


GATS eB yeHUN TS DIE DER CH 


50 


Re@ Biase leer eb lihih Ah: » 


RoBERT G. EBERHARD was born in Geneva, Switzerland, 
in 1884. Hestudied at the Art Students League as a pupil of Hermon 
A. MacNeil, and at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris, under Mercié, 
Tony Noel, E. Carlier, V. Peter and Rodin. 

Honors: Lissignol prize, Geneva, Switzerland; silver medal, Artists 
du Cher, Vierzon, France; honorable mention, Paris Salon. 

MEMBERSHIP: Société des Artistes Francgais; New Haven Paint and 
Clay Club. 

He does general and portrait sculpture. 


A BAS REN WWAR Ste sO EG Ee aeio.b aia 


ABASTENIA ST. LEGER EBERLE was born in Webster 
City, Iowa, in 1878. She received her sculptural training mainly 
at the Art Students League and under George Grey Barnard. She 
was greatly influenced by living when young in Porto Rico, where the 
native life gave the richest opportunity for studies of women and 
children at work and at play, a type of work which she has carried on 
in New York’s East Side. She made a specialty at one time of danc- 
ing figures and has done many portraits. 

Honors: bronze medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904; Helen Foster 
Barnett prize, National Academy of Design, 1910; bronze medal, 
Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate; National 
Sculpture Society, 1906. 

Works: Girl on Roller Skates, Mowgli, Metropolitan Museum of 
Art, New York; Little Mother, Art Institute of Chicago; Rag Time, 
Toledo Art Museum, Toledo, O.; The Windy Doorstep, copy in each 
of the following museums: Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, 
Mass.; Peabody Institute, Baltimore, Md.; Newark Museum, New- 
ark, N. J.; Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Salomé, Society for 
Encouragement of Art, Venice, Italy, and also, Twentieth Century 
Woman’s Club, Buffalo, N. Y.; Hurdy Gurdy, Detroit Museum, 
Detroit, Mich. 


ES ACY = CAT SBNGrA BASIE NARS eme BiB ILE 


53 


NUS KSVAWSRIEIITNSE MSI 


OlINTN 


Ad AVMALVD 


UMAAO AAITAU ‘SIWALUV 


54 


aera) Ome ae Neey eel Rabi WSN 


ULtric H. ELLERHUSEN was born in Waren, Mecklen- 
burg, Germany, in 1879. He was a student at the Art Institute of 
Chicago under Lorado Taft and of the Art Students League under 
Gutzon Borglum. He studied with Karl Bitter from 1906 to 1912. 

MeEmMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architec- 
tural League; Beaux-Arts Institute of Design; Allied Artists of 
America. 

Works: Ludeke memorial, Fairview Cemetery, N. J.; Contem- 
plation, Wonderment, Meditation and Frieze of Garland Bearers 
Fine Arts Building, San Francisco, Calif.; Artemis, relief over gateway 
Greystone, N. Y.; J. C. Schwab memorial fountain, Yale University, 
New Haven, Conn.; Peace monument and allegorical portraits of 
Confucius, Columbus, Pocahontas and Douglass, Elmwood Park, 
Bast Orange, N. J. 


JOHN ETTL 


JoOuN ETTL was born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1872. He 
studied at the Academy of Sculpture in Budapest, at the Academy 
of Fine Arts in Vienna, and also in Paris and Munich. 

Works: Abraham Lincoln, State Arsenal, N. Y.; War memorial, 
Pacpenutherord, N- |.: Soldiers monument, Haverstraw, N. Y. 
Orton memorial, Esteres Island, Peru, S. A.; sculpture, Palace of 
Justice, Berne, Switzerland. 


D9 


BOYSAND PANTHERS BY SRU DU EPI ee VANS 


eel Oe SEV ANS 


RUDULPH EVANSs was born in Washington, D. C., in 1878. 
He was educated at the Corcoran Art Gallery, Washington, D. C., 
the Art Students League, New York, and the Académie Julien and 
Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. 

Honors: bronze medal, Paris Salon, 1914; Elizabeth N. Watrous 
gold medal, National Academy of Design, 1920. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate. 

Works: statue, The Golden Hour, purchased by the French Gov- 
ernment for the Luxemburg Museum, Paris; replica of same in the 
Metropolitan Museum, New York; J. Sterling Morton monument; 
Kiernan memorial; statue of James B. Pierce; bronze portraits—, 
Maude Adams; Dean Joseph French Johnson of New York University; 
Frank Vanderlip. 


LO als Agee Re 


Louisa EyYReE was born in Newport, R. I., in 1872. She 
studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts from 1888 to 1891, 
at the Art Students League from 1891 to 1894, and was a pupil of 
Augustus Saint-Gaudens from 1894 to 1895. 

MEMBERSHIP: Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; Art Alliance 
of Philadelphia; Guild of Arts and Crafts, Philadelphia. 

Works: bronze tablets—, Gen. George Sykes, Memorial Hall, West 
Point, N. Y.; Hon. John A. Kasson; marble shield decorations of 
Arts and Sciences for the University Museum of the University of 
Pennsylvania; terra-cotta reliefs for a garden at Jenkintown, Pa.; 
relief of the children of Owen Wister; and various reliefs and figures 
of children, both portrait and ideal. Her specialty is portraits and 
ideal works of children. 


58 


SALLY JAMES FARNHAM 


SALLY JAMES FARNHAM was born in Ogdensburg, N. Y. 

Honors: Order of Bolivar, Venezuelan Government. 

Works: equestrian monument of Simon Bolivar, Central Park, 
New York City; Soldiers and Sailors monuments—, Ogdensburg, N. 
Y., Mt. Hope Cemetery, Rochester, N. Y., and elsewhere; Frieze of 
Discoverers, Pan-American Union, Washington, D. C.; marble por- 
traits of Marshall Sucre, and of Hipolito Unanue, Pan-American 
Union, Washington, D. C.; monument to Gen. Chaffee, Arlington, 
Washington, D. C.; portraits—, Marshall Sucre, and Hidalgo, Rio de 
Janeiro, Brazil; Vernon Castle memorial, Woodlawn Cemetery, New 
York City; portrait, Jascha Herfetz. 


BibyAsIE Ris sie Naja 


BEATRICE FENTON was born in Philadelphia, Pa., in 1887. 
She studied at the School of Industrial Art and the Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia. 

Honors: George B. McClellan Anatomy prize, 1907; Edmund 
Stewardson prize for sculpture, 1908, and Cresson European Scholar- 
ship, 1909 and 1910, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; honorable 
mention, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 
Calif., 1915; honorable mention for Rodin medal, Plastic Club Exhi- 
bition of Sculpture by American Women, 1916; George D. Widener 
gold medal, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1922; Fellowship 
prize, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1922; Georgine Shillard 
silver medal, Plastic Club, 1922. 

MEMBERSHIP: Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; Plastic Club 
of Philadelphia; Art Alliance of Philadelphia; National Association 
of Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: bronze Sea-weed fountain, Fairmount Park, Philadel- 
phia; Peter Moran, Art Club of Philadelphia; Caroline; Marjorie D. 
Marenet; The Sea-shell; A Table-fountain. 


60 


SEASW EE DeLOUNTALINGBYS BEATRICE SE ENTON 


61 


PAUL FJELDE 


PauL FJELDEwas born in Minneapolis, Minn., in 1892. He 
studied at the Minneapolis School of Art, the Beaux-Arts Institute of 
Design and the Art Students League, New York, and under Lorado 
Taft in Chicago. 

Honors: honorable mention, St. Paul Institute, 1918. 

MEMBERSHIP: Society of Western Sculptors; Chicago Society of 
Artists. 

Works: Lincoln monument, Christiania, Norway; J. S. Bradstreet 
memorial, Minneapolis Art Institute; Irwin memorial, Auburn, 
Me.; Gjertsen memorial, Minneapolis, Minn.; Lincoln monument, 
Hillsboro, N. D.; Pioneers memorial, Council Bluffs, Ia.; Donners- 
berger memorial, McKinley Park, Chicago, II]. 


62 


JOHN FLANAGAN 


JOHN FLANAGAN was born in Newark, N. J. He studied 
with Augustus Saint-Gaudens in New York, and in Paris with Chapu 
at the Académie Julien and Falguiére at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. 

Honors: silver medals—, International Exposition, Paris, 1900; 
Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; Louisiana Purchase 
Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; medal of honor, section of medals, 
Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; J. Sanford 
Saltus medal for medallic art, American Numismatic Society, 1921. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate; Connecticut 
Academy of Fine Arts; American Numismatic Society. 

Works: monumental clock, Library of Congress, Washington, D. C.; 
bronze relief, Antique Education, Free Public Library, Newark, N. J.; 
tinted marble relief, Aphrodite; bronze memorial portrait, Samuel 
P. Langley, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C.; E. A. 
Bulkeley memorial, bronze and marble, Aetna Life, Hartford, Conn.; 
medals—, Verdun Medal, given by the United States to the City of 
Verdun, France; Visit of the Prince of Wales to the United States, 
American Numismatic Society; and many other bas-reliefs and 
medals. | ote 


63 


QUEENTOFSA TEANTIS] B Years oEVAIO KR SE a Le ORTO 


SAIL WS ITTOH MR: dem esa rane) Coded Ot OM yea BO) 


SALVATOR ERSENY FLORIO was born in Messina, Italy, 
in 1890. He studied at the National Academy of Design, and has as- 
sisted in the studios of Hermon A. MacNeil, A. Stirling Calder and 
ainesei, Fraser. 

Honors: silver medal for nude figure, National Academy of De- 
sign; bronze medal for service as sculptor, Panama-Pacific Interna- 
tional Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

Works: reliefs—, Springtime; Adam and Eve; The Tribute; head of 
Minerva, San Francisco Museum of Art, San Francisco, Calif.; por- 
trait, Rear-Admiral C. J. Peoples. 


65 


ACME Ss Ack: RE Et RaAtS. Eels: 


JAMES EARLE FRASER was born in Winona, Minn., in 1876. 
He was a pupil of Falguiére in Paris. He was instructor at the Art 
Students League, 1906-1911. 

Honors: first prize, American Art Association, Paris, 1898; medal, 
Edison competition, 1906; gold medal for sculpture, Panama-Pacific 
International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MemBersuIpP: National Institute of Arts and Letters; National 
Sculpture Society ; National Academy of Design, academician, 1917. 

Works: bust, ex-Pres. Theodore Roosevelt, Senate Chamber, 
Capitol, Washington, D. C.; statue of Bishop Potter, Cathedral of 
St. John the Divine, New York; End of the Trail, San Francisco, 
Calif.; John Hay memorial, Cleveland, O.; Alexander Hamilton 
statue to be placed on the south plaza of the U. S. Treasury Building, 
Washington, D. C.; two monuments (war memorials) for the Bank 
of Montreal, Canada, to be placed in Montreal and Winnipeg (won 
In international competition); won competition for the John Ericsson 
statue to be placed in the Mall in Washington, D. C.; lately won a 
competition for the groups on the north pylons of the memorial bridge, 
Chicago, Ill. He designed the nickel five-cent piece (Indian head 
and buffalo) for the U. S. Government, 1913; the Victory medal, 1910; 
the American Academy of Arts and Letters medal; the Williams 
medal; award medal of the American Institute of Graphic Arts, 1920. 


66 


ALEXANDER HAMILTON BY JAMES EARLE FRASER 


67 


BABY GOAT BY LAURA GARDIN FRASER 


68 


LAURA GARDIN FRASER 


PeGU RAG AR DUNG! RAS ER Was born in Chicago, IIl., in 
1889. She studied sculpture at the Art Students League under 
James Earle Fraser, 1907-1910. 

Honors: Helen Foster Barnett prize, National Academy of Design, 
for group, Nymph and Satyr, 1916; Julia Shaw prize, National Acade- 
my of Design for Baby Goat, 1920. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Nymph and Satyr; Baby Goat; Grape Baby fountain, 
purchased by City of Buffalo and placed in Delaware Park, Buffalo, 
N. Y.; Golf Player Sun-dial, Lochmoor Country Club, Detroit, 
Mich.; Bide-A-Wee relief, placed over door of Bide-A-Wee Home for 
Animals, New York City; bust of Gilbert Stuart, Hall of Fame, New 
York University, New York; at present erecting large group memorial 
for Mrs. Russell in Newport, R. I.; numerous other groups of animals 
and statues; medals—, Irish Setter Club of America; National In- 
stitute of Social Science; Woman’s Home Companion, Better Babies. 


69 


DAWA IRE C Eibss TE Re be haleNiGaa 


DANIEL CHESTER FRENCH was born in Exeter, N. H., 
in 1850. He studied sculpture under Dr. William Rimmer in Boston, 
1870-1871, and with Thomas Ball in Florence, Italy, 1874-1876. 
His first public statue, The Minute Man, was erected in Concord, 
Mass., April 19, 1875. 

Honors: medal, Paris Salon, 1892; medal of honor, International 
Exposition, Paris, 1900; medal of honor for sculpture, New York 
Architectural League, 1912; medal of honor, Panama-Pacific Exposi- 
tion, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; gold medal of honor, National 
Institute of Arts and Letters, 1918. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate, 1900, 
academician, 1901; National Sculpture Society, honorary-president, 
1893; New York Architectural League, 1890; American Institute 
of Architects, 1896; Accademia San Luca, Rome; National Arts Club; 
American Academy of Arts and Letters. 

Works: John Harvard, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.; 
Dr. Gallaudet and his first Deaf Mute Pupil, Washington, D. C.; 
The Minute Man, Concord, Mass.; Death and the Sculptor, memorial 
to Martin Milmore, Boston, Mass.; Abraham Lincoln, Lincoln, Neb.; 
Four Continents, America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Custom House, N. Y. 
City; Alma Mater, Columbia University, N. Y. City; Quadriga, in 
collaboration with E. C. Potter, State Capitol, St. Paul, Minn.; 
equestrian statue of Washington, in collaboration with E. C. Potter, 
Paris, France,; Gen. Devens, equestrian statue, in collaboration with 
E. C. Potter, Worcester, Mass.; Lincoln statue, Lincoln memorial, 
Washington, D. C.; Parkman memorial, Boston, Mass.; Mourning 
Victory, memorial to Melvin brothers, Concord, Mass.; bust of 
Emerson, Memorial Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.; 
Spirit of Life, Trask memorial, Saratoga, N. Y.; Du Pont fountain, 
Washington, D. C.; statue of Emerson, Concord, Mass.; Lafayette 
monument, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Memory, Metropolitan Museum, N. Y. 


70 


TLE SoPiRIg OR. LIFE, SI RASKeMEMORIA LE BY {DANIELS CaP RENGEH 


MOTHER AND INFANT HERCULES BY LEO FRIEDLANDER 


72 


Oa hele AON WE R 


LEO FRIEDLANDER was born in New York City, in 1889. 
He was a pupil of the Art Students League, New York, and the Ecole 
des Beaux-Arts in Paris and also in Brussels. 
_ Honors: fellowship, American Academy in Rome, Italy, 1913- 
1916; Helen Foster Barnett prize, National Academy of Design, 
1918; honorable mention, Art Institute of Chicago, 1920. 

Works: sculptures on Washington Memorial Arch, Valley Forge, 
Poel eigures on altar ol ot- Thomas Church, Frankfort, Pa., 
1913; Bacchante friezes in private home, Hillcrest, L. |.; figures over 
main entrance of Masonic Temple, Detroit, Mich.; bronze eques- 
trian group, Potential America; garden figure, Belvedere, N. J.; From 
the Land of the Hyperboreans, equestrian statue (sketch). 


73 


EATR REP Es ls WV Te NSE aye Past avila 


HARRIET WHITNEY FRISHMUTH was born in Phila- 
delphia, Pa., 1880. She studied in Paris under Rodin and Injalbert, 
in Berlin under Cuno von Euchtritz, and also in New York under 
Hermon A. MacNeil and Gutzon Borglum. She exhibited at the 
Paris Salon in 1903. 

Honors: Augustus Saint-Gaudens prize, Art Students League; 
Helen Foster Barnett prize, for Girl and Dolphin fountain, National 
Academy of Design; McMillin prize for sculpture, National Associa- 
tion of Women Painters and Sculptors; honorable mention, for the 
Saki Sun-dial, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francis- 
co, 1915; National Arts Club prize, for Extase, National Association 
of Women Painters and Sculptors, 1921; Elizabeth N. Watrous gold 
medal, for Fantasie, National Academy of Design, 1922. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society, 1914; Art Alliance of 
America; National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors; 
League of American Artists; Allied Artists of America. 

Works: Joy of the Waters, Museum of Fine Arts, Dayton, Ohio; 
The Star; Globe Sun-dial; Saki Sun-dial; Girl and Dolphin Fountain; 
Fantasie; Slavonic Dancer; Extase. 


74 


THE VINE BY HARRIET W. FRISHMUTH 


75 


AGNES VALBORG FROMEN 


AGNES VALBORG FROMEN was born in Valdemarsvik, 
Sweden, in 1868. She was a pupil of Lorado Taft and Charles 
Mulligan at the Art Institute of Chicago. 

Honors: Municipal Art League prize of Chicago, 1912; second and 
third prizes for frieze of Illinois State Fair Building, 1914; prizes at 
Swedish-American Exhibitions, 1917 and 1919; Chicago Women’s Aid 
prize, 1921; honorable mention, Alumni Exhibition, Art Institute of 
hicago, 1022. 

Works: Spring, Art Institute of Chicago; bust of Washington Irv- 
ing, Washington Irving School, Bloomington, III.; memorial fountain, 
Englewood High School; memorial tablet, Hyde Park Church of 
Christ, Chicago. 


77 


> EER Ray SE DaVCWEN Des NStaia ys 


SHERRY EDMUNDSON Fry was born in Creston, Iowa, 
in 1879. He studied sculpture at the Chicago Art Institute under 
Lorado Taft, and at the Académie Julien and Ecole des Beaux-Arts in 
Paris. Heis a pupil of Verlet and Frederick MacMonnies. 

Honors: honorable mention at the Paris Salon, 1906, and medal, 
1908; Prix de Rome, American Academy in Rome, 1908-1911; silver 
medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 
1915; Elizabeth N. Watrous gold medal, National Academy of 
Design, 1917. 

MemBErsHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architectur- 
al League; National Academy of Design, associate. 

Works: statue, Mahaska, Indian Chief, Oskaloosa, Iowa; fountains 
—, Au Soleil, Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, O.; The Dolphin, Mt. 
Kisco, N. Y.; The Turtle, Worcester, Mass.; pediments—, Henry C. 
Frick house, New York City, and Clark Mausoleum, Los Angeles, 
Cal.; statue, Ira Allen, University of Vermont; Major C. Burret 
memorial fountain, St. George, Staten Island, N. Y.; Modesty, 
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City; Captain Abbey, 
Tompkinsville, Conn. 


78 


FORSUN ASE OUNTATIN SE LGU RIE Yyaro Hi rURS as beet ROY 


79 


MAIDEN MEDITATION BY EMIL FUCHS 


80 


evita UG ES 


EMIL FUCHS was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1866. He 
studied under Victor Tilguer and later at the Royal Academies in 
Vienna and Berlin, winning a travelling scholarship in 1890 which 
enabled him to study in Italy where he remained until 1899. During 
his stay in Rome, he executed his group, Mother Love. From 1897 he 
made his residence in London, but has more recently been established 
in New York, where his paintings and sculpture have been frequently 
shown. 

Honors: gold medal, Munich Exposition, 1896, for Mother Love. 

MemBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural 
League. 

WorRKS: monument to Prince Christian Victor, St. George’s 
Chapel, Windsor, England; monuments to Queen Victoria at Balmoral 
and Sandringham, England; The Sisters, memorial in marble, Walker 
Art Gallery, Liverpool, England; bronze statue, La Pensierosa, 
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; marble busts, Lady Alice 
Montague, Ignace Paderewski, Sir Arthur Pinero; marble bas-relief, 
Sancta Cecilia, in a private collection, New York; bronze busts, Gari 
Melchers, Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson, Sir David Murray; marble 
bas-relief, Mother and Child; Ashley Memorial, Ramsey Cathedral, 
England. 


81 


GEORGE ETIENNE GANIERE 


GEORGE ETIENNE GANIERE was born in Chicago, Ill. 
He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago, and in Europe. He 1s 
head of the department of sculpture in the Art Institute, Chicago. 

Honors: Shaffer prize, Art Institute of Chicago, 1919. 

MEMBERSHIP: Chicago Society of Artists; Society of Western 
Artists. 

Works: Baby Head, J. Vanderpoel collection; Lincoln, Lincoln 
memorial school, Webster City, la., and Burlington, Wis.; Lincoln 
fountain, Lincoln Highway, Chicago, Ill.; equestrian statue, Gen. 
Anthony Wayne, Fort Wayne, Ind.; Lincoln, and Douglas, Chicago 
Historical Society; Hately memorial, Highland Park, Ill.; Dr. F. W. 
Gunsaulus memorial, Chicago, Ill.; Awakening Soul; The Toilers; 
Innocence; Bather; Maternity; marble bust, Layton; many Lincoln 
memorials in which subject he has specialized. 


83 


CHARLES GRAFLY 


CHARLES GRAFLY was born in Philadelphia, Pa., in 1862. 
He was a student at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in 
Philadelphia and of Chapu and Dampt in Paris. He has been instruc- 
tor in the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts since 1892 and in- 
structor in sculpture in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts since 1917. 

Honors: honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1891; honorable mention, 
Temple Trust Fund, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1892; 
medal, World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; silver medal, 
Atlanta Exposition, 1895; Converse gold medal of honor, Pennsy]- 
vania Academy of Fine Arts, 1899; gold medal, International Exposi- 
tion, Paris, 1900; gold medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 
1901; gold medal, South Carolina Interstate Exposition, Charleston, 
S. C., 1902; grand prize, Buenos Aires Exposition, 1910; George D. 
Widener gold medal, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1913; 
Lea prize, Philadelphia Water Color Club, 1916; Elizabeth N. Watrous 
gold medal, National Academy of Design, 1918; Walter Palmer gold 
medal, Art Institute of Chicago, 1921. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Academy of 
Design, academician; New York Architectural League; Art Club of 
Philadelphia; National Institute of Arts and Letters; Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts; member, Municipal Art Jury, Philadelphia, 
Pa., and International Jury of Awards, Panama-Pacific International 
Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

Works: Mauvais Presage, Detroit Institute, Detroit, Mich.; 
Vulture of War, St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, Mo.; Gen. Rey- 
nolds, Smith memorial, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pa.; England, 
and France, Custom House, New York City; busts—, Dr. Joseph Price; 
Thomas P. Anshutz; Hermann Kotzschmar; William Paxton; George 
C. Thomas; Paul W. Bartlett; Pioneer Mother monument, San 
Francisco, Calif.; bust of Frank Duveneck, Carnegie Institute, 
Pittsburgh, Pa. 


84 


STUDY FOR HEAD OF WAR, MEADE MEMORIAL BY CHARLES GRAFLY 


85 


TOY VENUS, FOUNTAIN FIGURE, BY JOHN GREGORY 


86 


JOHN GREGORY 


JOHN GREGORY was born in London, England, in 1870. 
He studied with J. Massey Rhind for three years and at the Art Stu- 
dents League of New York under George Grey Barnard and Hermon 
A. MacNeil. He then spent three years at the Ecole des Beaux- 
Arts in Paris in the atelier Mercié. Returning to New York in 1906 
he worked as assistant in the studios of H. A. MacNeil, Gutzon Borg- 
lum and Herbert Adams. He has been director of the sculpture de- 
partment in the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, and associate in 
modelling at Columbia University, New York. 

Honors: fellowship of the American Academy in Rome, 1912-1915; 
medal for sculpture, New York Architectural League, 1921. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architect- 
ural League. 

Works: Venus, a marble panel, half life-size, for an overmantel; 
Woodnymph and Bacchante, life-size marble statues for a garden at 
Roslyn, L. I.; Orpheus and Dancing Panther, heroic-size bronze 
group for a garden at Loretta, Pa.; Philomela, life-size bronze figure 
for bird-garden at Manhasset, L. I.; The Voyage, decorative floor- 
relief for main office of the Cunard Building, New York; Toy Venus, 
three-quarter life-size marble statue for fountain at Syosset, L. I. 


87 


TRAN Gr omer Ray Ise 


FRANCES GRIMES was born in Braceville, Ohio, in 1869. 
After graduating from Pratt Institute, she was assistant to Herbert 
Adams from 1894-1900, and to Augustus Saint-Gaudens from 1900- 
1907. 

Honors: silver medal for medals, Panama-Pacific International 
Exposition, San Francisco, 1915; McMillan prize for sculpture, Na- 
tional Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, 1916; Associa- 
tion medal, National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, 
1920. 

MemBeERSHIP: National Sculpture Society, 1912; National Associa- 
tion of Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: bas-relief overmantel, Washington Irving High School, 
New York City; Girl by Pool, and Boy with Duck, fountain figures, 
Toledo Art Museum, Toledo, Ohio; bust of Bishop Potter, Grace 
Church, New York City; marble panels, Girls Singing; fountain figures, 
decorative panels, portrait bas-reliefs and portrait heads. 


88 


ie 


Pe lien caves He 


LOUIS HENRY DOW BY FRANCES GRIMES 


89 


GRUPPE 


GOOSE GIREY BY KARTS H: 


QO 


Keates sies Nets Gat Gr RaW 2: PE 


KARL HEINRICH GRUPPE was born in Rochester, N. Y.., 
in 1893.' He studied at the Royal Academy of Antwerp, Belgium, and 
the Art Students League, New York, and was a pupil of Karl Bitter. 

Honors: Saint-Gaudens prize, 1912, Art Students League; and 
Avery prize, 1920, New York Architectural League. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architectural 
League. 

Works: Final figure, Italian towers, Panama-Pacific Exposition; 
San Francisco, Calif., 1915; memorial tablets—, City Club, New York, 
and Princeton Charter Club, Princeton, N. J. 


con 


PRE te Rel Vato @ Rete: Bae tae 


FREDERIC V. GUINZBURG. was. born in New ayork 
City, in 1897. He studied at the Art Students League and under 
Victor D. Brenner, 1915-1917; also drawing with Jerome Myers, 
1914-1917. He also studied in France and Italy after the War, and 
is now at the School of American Sculpture. 

Works: Bobby; The Widower; Student of the Talmud; Madonna 
of the Streets; Contamination; The Bride of the Man Horse, inspired 
by a story of Lord Dunsany; portrait of Margaret Wycherley; The 
Destitute; A Peasant of Northern France; Homeless. 


TRYGVE HAMMER 


TRYGVE HAMMER was born in Norway, in 1878. He 
came to the United States in 1904 and studied sculpture at the Art 
Students League, the National Academy of Design, and at the 
Beaux-Arts Institute of Design. 


WALKER HANCOCK 


WALKER HANCOCK was born in St. Louis, Mo., in 1901. 
He studied at the School of Fine Arts, St. Louis, Mo., under Victor 
Holm, and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. 
Honors: Edmund Stewardson prize, 1921, and Cresson traveling 
scholarship, 1922, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. 
Works: portrait, Janet Shields; Sea Weed, fountain figure; James 
W. Walker. His specialty is garden sculpture. 


Q2 


BUST OF A WOMAN BY TRYGVE HAMMER 


93 


ide vy Eri Harvey 


YOUNG GORILLA BY ELI HARVEY 


94 


fee erie Ae ay aay: 


ELI HARVEY was born in Ogden, Ohio, in 1860. He studied 
drawing, painting and sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts, Cincin- 
nati, Ohio, under Noble, Lentz and Rebisso; in 1889 he entered the 
Académie Julien, Paris, studying drawing and painting under Con- 
stant, Lefebvre and Doucet, and animal sculpture under Emmanuel 
Frémiet at the Jardin des Plantes. 

Honors: John Wanamaker prize for sculpture, American Art 
Association, Paris, 1900; bronze medal for sculpture, Pan-American 
Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase 
Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; bronze medal, Panama-Pacific 
Exposition, San Francisco, 1915. 

MemBeErSHIP: National Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural 
League; New York Zodlogical Society; American Art Association, 
Paris; American Federation of Arts; League of American Artists. 

Works: sculpture for Lion House, N. Y. Zodlogical Park; life-size 
gorilla, N. Y. Zodlogical Society; recumbent lions for Eaton Mau- 
soleum, Toronto, Canada; sculptural feature for the Evangeline 
Blashfield memorial fountain; Brown Bear Mascot, Brown Univer- 
sity, Providence, R. I.; portraits—-, Senator Savage, Ohio; Gov. 
Anderson, Ky.; ex-Pres. Camp, New York Clearing House; Judge 
Doan, Ohio; U. S. Circuit Judge Cox, Ohio; two figures for Youngs- 
town Court House, Ohio. 


95 


ESE ES el ae Dee Gete ile TAGS A VV elnlens 


ERNEST BRUCE HASWELL was born in Kentucky, in 
1887. He studied at the Cincinnati Art Academy under Clement 
Barnhorn, and at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, 
under Paul Dubois and Victor Rousseau. 

MEMBERSHIP: Cincinnati Art Club; Crafters Guild. 

Works: bas-relief, Spinoza, Hebrew Union College; replica of same 
at Spinoza House, The Hague, Holland; Northcott memorial, Spring- 
field, I1l.; Soldiers memorial, Bond Hill, O.; Rowe memorial, Avondale 
School, Cincinnati, O.; Kuhn memorial, University School, Cincin- 
nati, O.; portraits of Gen. Green, Gen. St. Clair, Gen. Wayne; Little 
Turtle, Greenville, O.; fountains, sun-dials and bird baths in private 
gardens; four symbols of the Evangelists, St. Calman’s Church, 
Cleveland, O. 


96 


ease lee eaView Tl AW KS 


RACHEL M. Hawks was born in Port Deposit, Maryland, 
in 1879. She was a pupil of the Rinehart School of Sculpture under 
Ephraim Keyser and Charles Pike. 

Works: bust of Dr. Basil Gildersleeve, Johns Hopkins University, 
Baltimore, Md.; bronze fountain figures—, Sixteen, The Secret, 
The Gold Fish Girl; portrait bust, Wm. A. Fisher, Jr.; small bronze, 
Bobbie’s Smile. 


Petia ANU Cr WeseleW oe iE UBER 


CarRL AuGusTuS HEBER was born in Stuttgart, Ger- 
many, in 1874. He was a pupil of Lorado Taft in Chicago. 

Honors: bronze medal, St. Louis Exposition, 1904, and Panama- 
Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural 
League. 

Works: Pastoral, Art Institute, Chicago, Ill.; Champlain memorial, 
Crown Point, N. Y.; statue, Champlain, Plattsburgh, N. Y.; Schiller 
monument, Rochester, N. Y.; Benjamin Franklin, Princeton Univer- 
sity, Princeton, N. J. 


o7 


Plea EASEL) SET Tea ain ir 


ELst1—E WARD HERING was born in Howard County, Mo., 
in 1871, and died on January 12th, 1923. She began the study of 
sculpture in Denver, Colo., and in 1894 entered the studio of Augustus 
Saint-Gaudens at Cornish, N. H. 

Honors: silver medal, South Carolina Interstate Exposition, 
Charleston, S. C., 1902; bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposi- 
tion, St. Louis, Mo., 1904. 

MeMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Schermerhorn memorial font, chapel of Our Saviour, 
Denver, Colo.; portrait reliefs of her Mother and Mrs. Evans; foun- 
tain, Boy Teasing a Frog. Her specialty was portraits, busts and 
reliefs. 


* Deceased. 


98 


“> 


BAPTISMAL FONT BY ELSIE WARD HERING 


99 


ROGERS PEATT SBY SU ENR YS HERING 


100 


ile Nike yet ERE LN G 


HENRY HERING was born in New York City in 1874. 
He studied at Cooper Union, 1888-1891, and with Philip Martiny, 
1891-1897; also at the Art Students League, New York, from 1894 to 
1898, and from 1900-1901, at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, and the 
Colarossi Academy, Paris. In 1900 he entered the studio of Augustus 
Saint-Gaudens where he remained until the latter’s death in 1907. 

Honors: silver medal for medals and bronze medal for sculpture, 
Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, 1915. 

MemBERSHIP: New York Architectural League, 1910; National 
Sculpture Society, 1913. 

Works: Civil War memorial, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.; 
Robert Collyer memorial, Church of the Messiah, New York; 
sculpture on the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IIl.; 
on the Federal Reserve Banks at Dallas, Texas; Kansas City, Mo.; 
and Cleveland, Ohio; seal of the Federal Reserve Bank, Chicago, III.; 
official seal for the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San 
Francisco, 1915; Huntington Wolcott Jackson memorial, Crerar Li- 
brary, Chicago, and Princeton University; portrait busts—, Augustus 
Saint-Gaudens, Bishop Ethelbert Talbott; also fountains, statuettes 
and portrait reliefs. He is at present engaged on sculptural groups 
for the Memorial Bridge pylons on Michigan Avenue, Chicago, III. 


10! 


Pee ba eles Cn ata Vel UA ND st |B BARD 


Perse eR CG Keri) aay Et AND) FLL BBA. RD Was born in Can- 
ton, Mo., in 1881. He studied at the Chicago Art Institute under 
orado: [aft. 

Honors: honorable mention, Art Institute of Chicago, 1913; 
Shaffer prize, Art Institute of Chicago, 1914. 

MEMBERSHIP: Chicago Society of Artists; Cliff Dwellers. 

Works: Mark Twain, Hannibal, Mo.; Gen. James Shields, Car- 
rollton, Mo.; Col. Alexander Doniphan, Richmond, Mo.; Dr. G. V. 
Black, Lincoln Park, Chicago, Ill.; Volney Rogers, Youngstown, 
Ohio; Gen. H. W. Lawton, Ft. Wayne, Ind.; Gen. Grant, Vicksburg, 
Miss.; Soldier monuments, Winchester, Va., also at Jackson, Mich., 
Princeton, Ill., and Great Bend, Kan.; Soldier and Sailor monument, 
Pico. Pa,, Col, David N. Foster, Ft. Wayne, Ind:; United 
Daughters of Confederacy monument, Shiloh National Park, Tenn.; 
Dr. Miller, Columbus, Ohio; all of the former are heroic-size portrait 
statues mounted on architectural settings; bust of Dr. Callahan, 
Columbus, Ohio; also portrait busts and small ideal heads. 


103 


CGHFAGRSEES © OSs EN aus 


GHARLES Lovuds JHA TON -was- Dorn ial thaca. Ne eee 
1869. He was a pupil of Will Low at the National Academy of Design 
and of Gérome and Bouguereau in Paris, and studied also at the 
Ecole des Beaux-Arts under Gumer. 

Honors: traveling scholarship, National Academy of Design, 
1893; prize for garden sculpture, Hartsdale, N. Y.; prizes for painting 
and numerous mentions; honorable mention, Pan-American Expo- 
sition, Buffalo, 1901. 

MeEmBERSHIP: Mural Painters; National Sculpture Society, secre- 
tary; New York Architectural League; Artists Aid Society; National 
Academy of Design, academician, 1916. 

Works: mural decorations, Orphans Court, Wilkes-barre, Pa.; 
illustrated books for a number of years, ““Emmy Lou,” “Under the 
Trees,’’ etc.; painted portraits in oil and pictures in water colors; 
numerous small pieces of sculpture and some in life-size; Henry Hud- 
son, heroic-size statue; Diana with her Dogs, small bronze, private 
collection, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Atalanta, Cleveland Museum of Art, 
Cleveland, O.; Call to Arms, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, 
D. C.; Vanity, in a private collection, St. Louis, Mo. 


104 


FOUNTAIN .FIGURE BY CHARLES L. HINTON 


OFFRANDE BY MALVINA HOFFMAN 


106 


MALVINA HOFFMAN 


MALVINA HOFFMAN was born in New York City, in 1887. 
She was a pupil of Gutzon Borglum and of Rodin. 

Honors: honorable mention for sculpture, Panama-Pacific Inter- 
national Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; Shaw memorial 
prize, National Academy of Design, 1917; George D. Widener gold 
medal, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1920; Helen Foster 
Barnett prize, National Academy of Design, 1921. 

MEMBERSHIP: Three Arts Club; National Association of Women 
Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: Russian Bacchanale, Luxembourg Museum, Paris; bronze 
head, The Modern Crusader, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New 
York; statuette, Pavlowa Gavotte, Detroit Institute, Detroit, Mich.; 
bust, Gervais Elwes, Queens Hall, London; memorial group in Caen 
stone, The Sacrifice, presented to Harvard University by Mrs. Robert 
Bacon, 1922, and temporarily placed in the Cathedral of St. John the 
Divine, New York City; La Peri (Pavlowa). 


107 


VAG TO Resee LG eM 


Victor S. HoOLm was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 
1876. He was educated at the Art Institute, Chicago, studying 
under Lorado Taft. He studied at the Art Students League, New 
York, and in the studio of Philip Martiny. 

Honors: Carleton prize, St. Louis Art Guild, 1914, 1916, 1917; 
honorable mention, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San 
Francisco, Calif., 1915; prize for best work of art of the year, Art 
League, ot, louis, Vio, 1022; 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Municipal Art Com- 
mission, president, 1917; Art League, St. Louis, Mo.; Artists Guild, 
St. Louis, Mo. 

Works: Luman Parker monument, Rolla, Mo.; Ives memorial, City 
Art Museum, St. Louis, Mo.; Missouri State monument, Vicksburg, 
Miss.; Gov. Thomas Carlin monument, Carrollton, Ill.; sculptural 
decorations, St. Pius’s Church, St Louis, Mo.; Barnes memorial, Barnes 
Hospital, St. Louis, Mo.; sculptural frieze, Fort Dodge High School, 
Ft. Dodge, Ia.; Washington University War memorial, Washington 
University, St. Louis, Mo.; decorations, New Grand Central Theatre, 
St. Louis, Mo.; numerous public and private portraits, tablets, etc.; 
ideal works—, Boy with Father’s Sword, St. Louis Public Library; 
The Spirit of France; Job. 


108 


TOES PERI TO Re CAN CED Yany LG ORS ae tL© IE 


109 


DAN CER Bx CECI LED ES De tlOWesRD 


110 


rl tiem eae FOV ATRL) 


Ghee oie Ou le h eeitlO WARD was born in Chiton, 
Canada, in 1888. At the age of thirteen he started working at the 
Art School, Buffalo, N. Y., where he studied under James E. Fraser. 
In 1905 he entered the Académie Julien, Paris, and exhibited at the 
Salon the following year. 

MEMBERSHIP: Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, associé, 1912. 

Works: two war monuments in France, one at Hautot-sur-Mer 
and one at Ouville-la-Riviére, both towns on the Normandy coast; 
most of his work consists of nude figures of various sizes, but he has 
also done many portrait busts and animal studies. He 1s fond of 
working directly in stone and marble, and the marble figure in the 
present exhibition is an example of this method. 


II! 


ROBERT B. HOWARD 


ROBERT B. HOWARD was born in New York in 1896. He 
attended the California School of Arts and Crafts, studying drawing 
under P. W. Wahl and painting under X. Martinez. In 1916 he 
entered the Art Students League, studying under Kenneth Hayes 
Miller. In 1918 he went to France, and after the War studied alone 
in Paris for two years and elsewhere in Europe. 


EDITH HOWLAND 


Ep1itH HOWLAND was born in Auburn, N. Y. She studied 
in New York at the Art Students League under Daniel C. French and 
Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and in Paris under Gustave Michel. 

Honors: honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1913. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Association 
of Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: marble group, Between Yesterday and Tomorrow, Met- 
ropolitan Museum of Art, New York; small bronzes, marble busts. 


COLYADHe MBMER WOehen ie IF iB ana 


CrypeE Du VERNET Hunt was born in the United States. 
He belongs to the well-known Hunt family of architects. He has 
lived in Paris for ten years and exhibited at the Salon there. 
Works: Bronze Boy, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; 
Nirvana, marble group. 


113 


ANNA VAUGHN HYATT 


ANNA VAUGHN HyYATT was born in Cambridge, Mass., 
in 1876. She was the pupil of Henry H. Kitson in Boston, and of 
Hermon A. MacNeil and Gutzon Borglum in New York. She is 
the Curator of sculpture at the French Museum, New York. 

Honors: bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1910; silver medal, 
Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; gold medal, 
Plastic Club, Philadelphia, 1916; John Sanford Saltus medal, National 
Academy of Design, 1920; and 1922, for statue, Diana; awarded the 
purple rosette by the French government, 1915, and made Officer of 
the Legion of Honor, 1922. 

MemBeErsHIP: National Sculpture Society; American Numismatic 
Society; National Academy, academician; Federation of Arts; 
North Shore Art Association; Art Alliance of America. 

Works: Lion, Dayton, O., 1909; Diana; Jaguar, and Reaching 
Panther, bronze figures on gate-posts; bronze Fighting Elephants, 
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; memorial at Lancaster, N. H.; 
equestrian statue, Joan of Arc, Riverside Drive, New York City; 
replicas in Blois, France, and Gloucester, Mass.; full relief, Joan of Arc, 
Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York City, 1922. She has 
made a great specialty of animal sculpture and also of garden sculp- 
tures and fountains. 


114 


- WrNS 


JOAN] OFVARC BY ANNA” Ve HYATTL 


MICHEL JACOBS 


NEUGtE ioe C.O.BiSewass born. in “\lontreal, Can.; in. 1877. 
He studied at the National Academy of Design, New York, the Ecole 
des Beaux-Arts and the Académie Julien, Paris. He was a pupil of 
J. P. Laurens in Paris and of E. M. Ward in New York. 

Works: bronze bust, Admiral Peary; bronze statue, Rock of All 
Nations; bronze statue, In Flanders Field; bas-relief, W. J. Bryan, 
National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D. C.; bronze head, Fritz 
Kreisler; bas-relief, Susan B. Anthony; medal, Military Order of the 
World War. 


7, 


AUB E Role WAAC Ee RSs 


ALBERT JAEGERS was born in Elberfeld, Germany, in 
1868. He came to Cincinnati, Ohio, while a boy and was apprenticed 
to his father, a wood-carver, who was engaged in ecclesiastical work. 
He studied sculpture at the Cincinnati Art Academy under Louis J. 
Rebisso, and architecture in the office of Lucien Plymton. He 
studied subsequently in the art centers of Europe. 

MemBeErsuHIP: New York Architectural League; National Institute 
of Arts and Letters; National Sculpture Society. 

Works: statues, New York Custom House, and Fine Arts Building, 
St. Louis, Mo.; commissions for Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 
N. Y., and Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo.; monument 
to General von Steuben, Washington, D. C., 1910, (won in a limited 
competition with a number of sculptors under an Act of U. S. Govern- 
ment, 1906, and awarded through recommendation of Augustus 
Saint-Gaudens) replica presented by U. S. Government to Germany, 
1911; marble monument to the Founders of Germantown, Pa., 1920. 


118 


SUN-=DIAL BY ALBERT JAEGERS 


119 


DD CAINS 1B: YOR Eres EYGIN NG EI NUSDNES 


120 


F. LYNN JENKINS 


F. LYNN JENKINS was born in Devonshire, England. 
He studied in the Royal Academy Schools in London, and in Paris 
and Rome. 

MEMBERSHIP: Royal Society of British Sculptors; National Sculp- 
ture Society; New York Architectural League. 

Works: portrait busts—, King Edward VIJ.; Sec’y Mellon; John 
McFadden; George J]. Gould, and many others; decorative sculptures, 
—, Lloyd’s Registry of British Shipping; United Kingdom Provident 
Institute; public libraries, Town Halls and other public and private 
buildings in London and elsewhere; garden decorations and fountains, 
Luton Hoo and Knowsley, England; fountains and pedestal sculp- 
ture, Chestnut Hill, Pa.; statuette, Diana, Metropolitan Museum of 
Art, New York, and numerous others. 


121 


CARL PAUL JENNEWEIN 


CARL PAUL JENNEWEIN was born in Stuttgart, Ger- 
many, in 1890. He studied sculpture at the Art Students League, 
New York. 

Honors: collaborative prize for sculpture and Avery prize, New 
York Architectural League, 1912; honorable mention, collaborative 
competition, New York Architectural League, 1915; fellowship in 
sculpture, American Academy in Rome, Italy, 1916-19109. 

MeEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural 
League. 

Works: Dudley memorial gate, Harvard University, Cambridge, 
Mass.; Darlington memorial fountain, Washington, D. C.; Caruso 
tablet, Metropolitan Opera House, New York; sculptural decorations 
—, on the Cunard Building, New York; the Eastmann School of 
Music, Rochester, N. Y.; Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, 
Pa.; Cupid and Gazelle, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; 
Portrait of a Child, Corcoran Art Gallery, Washington, D.C. 


122 


CUPID AND GAZELLE BY C. PAUL JENNEWEIN 
123 


WOA BED Ue Sebo Wi aOKONDy eve gh Ah 


MavuDE S. JEWETT was born in Englewood, N. J., in 1873. 

She studied at the Art Students League, and then in private studios 
for six years. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Association of Women Painters and Sculp- 
tors. 

Works: fountain, Cleveland Museum of Fine Art, Cleveland, O.; 
Reflections; Frog and Heron Bird Bath. She has done many portrait 
statuettes. 


JEAN JUSZKO 


JEAN JUSZKO was born in Ungvar, Hungary, in 1880. He 
was a pupil of the National School of Ceramics in Hungary and of the 
Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural 
League; American Numismatic Society. 

Works: monument, Archbishop Samy, Santa Fé, N. M.; Group 
of Dancers; Dancing Figure; portraits, fountain figures, etc. 


124 


GRACE MOTT JOHNSON 


GracE Mott JOHNSON was born in New York City, in 
1882. She studied at the Art Students League under Hermon A. 
MacNeil and Gutzon Borglum and also in Paris. She exhibited at 
the Salon in 1910. 

Honors: McMillin sculpture prize, National Association of Women 
Painters and Sculptors, 1917. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Association of 
Women Painters and Sculptors; Society of Independent Artists; 
Society of Animal Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: bronze bas-relief, Chimpanzees; White-tailed Deer Walk- 
ing; Gunda; carved bas-reliefs—, Horses Grazing; Bull and Oxen; 
Elephants; Florida Cattle; bronzes in the round—, Calf Stretching; 
Mare’ and Foal; Old Lion; Zebra Bull; Greyhound Pup; Goat; 
Colt Walking; Mongolian Wild Horse, and many others. 


ELEPHANT BY GRACE M. JOHNSON 


125 


GOZO KAWAMURA 


Gozo KAWAMURA was born in Japan in 1886. He studied 
in the studios of Henry H. Kitson, Boston, of Frederic Remington, 
New York, and also of A. A. Weinman, J. E. Fraser and others. He 
was éléve définitif de l’Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. He was a pu- 
pil of MacMonnies in 1909 and assistant, 1906-1920. 

MEMBERSHIP: American Numismatic Society. 


Works: portrait bust, Prince Katcho; Ideal Holstein cattle, cow 
and bull. 


E RENE SsT) VV lesa Ke ey setae ke 


ERNEST WISE KEYSER was born in Baltimore, Md., 
in 1876. He was astudent at the Art Students League and Académie 
Julien, Paris. He won in competition the commissions for numerous 
portraits and mortuary and public memorials. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural 
League; American Art Association, Paris. 

Works: Enoch Pratt memorial, Baltimore, Md.; statue of Barry, 
Frederick, Md.; bronze figure, Sir Galahad, Harper memorial, Ot- 
tawa, Can.; Admiral W. S. Schley, State House, Annapolis, Md.; 
Peter Fenelon Collier memorial, New York; Leith memorial, Deal, 
N. J.; bronze and marble memorial, Twelfth Infantry, New York 
Guard; heroic group, Mother and Child, Isaac L. Rice memorial, 
Pelham Bay Park, New York. 


126 


ORIENTA, FOUNTAIN FIGURE BY ERNEST W. 
KEYSER 


127 


JULIO KILENYI 


JuLtio KILENyI was born in Arad, Hungary, in 1885. He 
studied in Hungary, Germany and France. 

MemBerSHIP: New York Architectural League; National Sculp- 
ture Society ; American Numismatic Society;Allied Artists of America; 
League of New York Artists. 

Works: medals—, Distinguished Service, U.S. Navy; War Service, 
American Car and Foundry Co.; U. S. Navy-Curtiss, First Trans- 
atlantic Flight ;Centenary of Independence of Peru; Plymouth Tercen- 
tenary, Boston Numismatic Society; Athletic medal, Council Bluffs, 
Iowa; Rolando Ricci; Inauguration of Archbishop Curley of Balti- 
more; Mark Twain; Lord Northcliffe; Charles W. Eliot. 


129 


ISADORE KONTI 


ISADORE KONTI was born in Vienna, Austria, in 1862. 
At the age of sixteen he entered the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna, 
won several scholarships, and after concluding his studies in the 
Meisterschule of Prof. Kundmann, received a scholarship which en- 
abled him to study for two years in Rome, Italy. He came to the 
United States in 1890 and worked for two years on the decorations 
for the buildings of the World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 
1892. In 1893 he became associated with the late Karl Bitter in 
New York, executing numerous decorative works. In 1900 he 
established a studio in New York and executed work for the Pan- 
American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901. 

Honors: gold medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; first prize, Exposition, Atlanta, Ga. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, academician, 1900; 
National Sculpture Society; New York Architectural League; 
National Arts Club. 

Works: Festival Procession, frieze, Gainsborough Studio Building, 
New York; The Brooks, marble fountain, Greystone, Yonkers, N. Y.; 
The Despotic Age and Immortality, Metropolitan Museum, New 
York; memorial to “‘ Kit’’ Carson and Lt. Beale, National Museum of 
Art, Washington, D. C.; statues of Justinian and Alfred the Great, 
Court House, Cleveland, O.; McKinley monument, Philadelphia, 
from the sketch model of the late Charles A. Lopez; figure, Plaza 
Fountain, New York, from the sketch of the late Karl Bitter; re- 
cumbent figure in marble of Dr. Morgan Dix, Trinity Church, N. Y.; 
memorial to Bishop Horatio Potter, Cathedral of St. John the Divine, 
New York; memorial to Soldiers of the World War, Yonkers, N. Y.; 
fountain, Mother and Child. 


130 


ILNOM 


AuNOdVSI Ad NIVLINNOA AO LuUVd 


131 


ADOLESCENCE: BY MARIO J. KORBEL 


132 


MARIO J. KORBEL 


MARIO J. KORBEL was born in Osik, Czechoslovakia, in 
1882. He studied in Munich and Paris. 

Honors: Shaffer prize, Art Institute of Chicago, 1910. 

MEMBERSHIP: Chicago Society of Artists. 

Works: Dancing group, Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, 
Ohio; Andante, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Minerva, 
University of Havana, Cuba; marble bust, Chicago Art Institute, 
Chicago, IIl.; McPhee memorial monument, Denver, Col. 


ANNA COLEMAN LADD 


ANNA COLEMAN LADD was born in Philadelphia in 1878. 
She studied drawing and sculpture for ten years in Paris and Rome, 
and lately in Boston, with criticisms from Gallori, Rodin, Grafly and 
others. She organized the first open-air sculpture exhibitions in the 
Public Gardens, Boston, Mass., and in Rittenhouse Square, Phila- 
delphia, Pa. In 1917 she founded the American Red Cross Studio 
of portrait masks for disfigured soldiers in Paris, and worked there 
until after the Armistice. 

Honors: honorable mention, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San 
Francisco, Calif.; 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society, 1915; National Academy 
of Design; Art Institute of Chicago; Guild of Boston Artists. 

Works: Bronze Lady, Gardner Collection, Boston, Mass.; Wind 
and Spray, Borghese Collection, Rome, Italy; Fountain of Youth, 
Torresdale, Pa.; marble Faith, Deaconess School, Cathedral of St. 
John the Divine, New York; bronze soldier memorials for the Ameri- 
can Legion at Manchester and Hamilton, Mass. 


133 


AUER Relea lA Ess a 


ALBERT LAESSLE was born in Philadelphia in 1877. He 
studied in the Spring Garden Institute, the Drexel Institute Penn- 
sylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and with Charles Grafly; also in 
Paris, 1904-1907. He is instructor in sculpture at the Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia. 

Honors: Edmund Stewardson prize, 1902, and Cresson travelling 
scholarship, 1904-1907, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; bronze 
medal, Buenos Aires Exposition, 1910; Fellowship prize, Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts, 1915; gold medal, Panama-Pacific Exposition, 
San Francisco, 1915; first sculpture prize, Americanization through 
Art Exhibition, Philadelphia, 1916; George D. Widener gold med- 
al, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1918; honorable mention 
for sculpture, Art Institute of Chicago, 1920. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Pennsylvania Academy 
of Fine Arts; Philadelphia Art Alliance; Société des Amis de la 
Médaille d’Art, Brussels, Belgium; Society of Painters and Sculptors 
of Animal Life, New York; New York Society of Artists. 

Works: Turtle and Lizards, Blue-Eyed Lizard, Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Heron and Fish, Carnegie 
Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Billy, and bronze Penguins, in Fairmount 
Park, Philadelphia; small bronze, Turning Turtle, and Victory—a 
bronze Eagle, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. 


134 


PENGUINS BY ALBERT LAESSLE 


135 


oye mee NG TAME RIGAs| 


BERENICE LANGTON was born in Erie County, Pa. She 
first studied sculpture under Augustus Saint-Gaudens in 1891, and 
began also at the same time the study of drawing and architecture. 
Later she worked for two years in Paris, having criticisms from 
Rodin. 

Honors: Helen Foster Barnett prize for sculpture, National 
Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Association of Women Painters and 
Sculptors. 

Works: Lawrence memorial, New London, Conn.; Rathborne 
tablet, New York Athletic Association, Travers Island, N. Y.; Triton 
fountain, Oakdene, Bernardsville, N. J.; vari-colored marble fountain, 
Cleveland, O.; Swan fountain, Hempstead, L. I.; marble Sun-dial, 
Morristown, N. J.; Booth memorial, Lincoln Hospital, to be placed 
in the near future. She has done numerous small marbles and bronzes 
and portrait medals. 


GER TR UDB Kae eae 


GERTRUDE K. LATHROP was born in Albany, N. Y., in 
1896. She studied sculpture under Solon H. Borglum, 1918, 1920- 
1021, 

Works: Nancy Lee; New Born; Found; Playthings. 


130 


NAN GY E abe G ERoLR UD Pap kemr Asi O 


137 


SIMNVI AAT Ad ‘NOLONIHSVM ‘SHONAIOS JO AWACVOV TVNOILVN UOA TANVd 


% med ~ - 
ese” sear a eae 
= v = ‘i : 


aay Ger. 


aS 
pa eae Sr ge ae Ne ee 


nore Bali adh 


38 


I 


ale ieee AGW RSE 


LEE LAURIE was born in Germany in 1877. He worked in 
the studios of many sculptors until 1904. He was instructor in 
sculpture at Yale University, 1908-1919, and instructor in Harvard 
Architectural School, 1910-1912. 

Honors: gold medal, American Institute of Architects. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: two groups and a figure, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, 
St. Louis, Mo., 1904; sculptural ornament, U.S. Military Academy, 
West Point, N. Y.; statues for large reredos, St. Thomas’ Church, 
New York City; all the statues and most of the ornament for Hark- 
ness memorial quadrangle, Yale University, New Haven, Conn.; 
he has done the sculpture for buildings of Bertram G. Goodhue, archi- 
tect, for many years, and is now engaged upon his buildings for the 
National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D. C., and for the new 
State Capitol building, Lincoln, Neb. He has done much Gothic 
ecclesiastical sculpture. 


139 


UES STRAW ss ONS Eaters, 


Jess LAWSON-PEACEY was born in Edinburgh, Scot- 
land, in 1885. She studied at the College of Art, Edinburgh, and the 
Royal College of Art, South Kensington, London. 

Honors: Helen Foster Barnett prize, National Academy of Design, 
1918; George D. Widener gold medal, Pennsylvania Academy of 
Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pa. 

MEMBERSHIP: British Institute; Royal College of Art, London; 
Alliance; National Sculpture Society; National Association of Women 
Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: Daphne, 1905; Belgium in 1914-1916; The Roman Race, 
1918; Galatea, 1919; Play, 1920. 


ACR TL WGRee cles 


ARTHUR LEE was born in Trondhjem, Norway, in 1881. He 
studied in Paris, Rome and London. 
Honors: honorable mention for sculpture, Panama-Pacific Inter- 
national Exposition, San Francisco, 1915. 
Works: Eureka; Volupté; Great Fortune; Dawn; Vase Sacré; 
Ethiopian. 


140 


TORSO BY ARTHUR LEE 


141 


THESBATHERS BY SeEO SVEN TE IEE 


142 


LALO) bie Seb Saba 


Leo LENTELLI was born in Bologna, Italy, in 1879. He 
was formerly instructor in the California School of Fine Arts and is 
at present instructor of modeling in the Art Students League of New 
York. 

Honors: Avery prize, New York Architectural League, 1911, and 
1921; collaborative prize and Avery prize, New York Architectural 
League, 1913; purchase prize, San Francisco Art Association, 1916; 
gold medal for sculpture, New York Architectural League, 1922. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society, 1907; New York Archi- 
tectural League, 1900. 

Works: Figure of the Saviour and sixteen angels for the reredos, 
Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York; group over entrance of 
Mission Branch Library, San Francisco, Calif.; five figures for facade, 
San Francisco Public Library; decorations for Orpheum Theatre, 
St. Louis, Mo.; decoration for the Sixteenth Street Bridge, Pitts- 
burgh, Pa.; panel for the Corning Free Academy, Corning, N. Y.; 
Flagpole, Rice Memorial Playfield, Pelham, N. Y.; panels, Straus 
Bank Building, New York. 


143 


APE Reb me cara arlene: /: 


ALFRED D. LEwNz was born in Fond du Lac, Wis., in 1872. 
He began as a jeweler’s apprentice, and then studied the arts of en- 
graving, chasing, metal founding, etc. He has studied the whole 
series of operations required to produce an object of art in metal. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Desha, bronze statuette; The Flight of Time, in colored 
wax; The Orchid Pearl, cast in five metals; Aphrodite, cast in six 
metals; The Elusive Witch, Pavlowa, in bronze; The Spirit of the 
Dance, in silver; Sefiorita Hootch, and Susette, in bronze. 


144 


DESHAS BEY ALEREDSEENZ 


145 


EVE BY GEORG J; LOBER 


140 


GEORG JOHN LOBER 


GOR Ge ele 6 eke was bom in Chicago, Ill; in 1802, 
He studied at the National Academy of Design under A. S. Calder 
and Hermon A. MacNeil at the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, New 
York. 

Honors: Avery collaborative prize, New York Architectural 
League, 1911; honorable mention, Chicago Art Institute, 1918 and 
loz; 

MEMBERSHIP: New York Architectural League; National Sculpture 
Society; Allied Artists of America; American Numismatic Society. 

Works: Eleanor T. Woods Peace memorial, Norfolk, Va.; Boy 
Fountain Figure, Cohn estate, Cape Cod, Mass.; Lincoln Circuit 
Markers commission for the State of Illinois. 


147 


BaViEe YoN@ Bele ONG Aan 


EVELYN B. LONGMAN was born in Winchester, O., in 
1874. She studied at the Art Institute of Chicago under Lorado 
Taft, 1898-1900, and was assistant in the studio of Daniel Chester 
French, 1901-1904. 

Honors: silver medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
San Francisco, Calif., 1915; Shaw memorial prize, National Academy 
of Design, 1918; W. M. R. French gold medal, Art Institute, Chicago, 
1920; George D. Widener gold medal, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine 
MER VOW 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Academy of 
Design, 1919; Connecticut Academy of Fine Arts; American Numis- 
matic Society; American Federation of Arts; Municipal Art Society 
of New York. 

Works: Colossal Victory on dome of Festival Hall, St. Louis 
Exposition, St. Louis, Mo.; bronze doors of chapel, U. S. Naval 
Academy, Annapolis, Md.; bronze doors of Library, Wellesley College, 
Wellesley, Mass.; Ryle memorial, Public Library, Paterson, N. J.; 
fountain of Ceres, Court of Four Seasons, Panama-Pacific Inter- 
national Exposition; colossal figure of Electricity on tower of American 
Telephone and Telegraph Building, New York City; Allison monu- 
ment, Capitol grounds, Des Moines, la.; sculpture on Centennial 
Monument, Chicago, IIl.; sculpture on war memorial, Naugatuck, 
Conn.; Torso, and Victory, Metropolitan Museum, New York; 
Victory, and Electricity, Toledo Museum, Toledo, O.; portraits of 
John Stewart Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. deForest, Henry 
Bacon, J. G. Schmidlapp and others; bronze statue, The Future, and 
bust, Louise, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. 


148 


BLIZA BEM BY EVE IE YNS Bs LONGMAN 


149 


THE GOLDEN AGE, FOUNTAIN FIGURE 
BY ARTHUR E. LORENZANI 


150 


yee ee LORENZ ASN 


Poe tO Re sO REN ZA NT Was born im Carrara, Italy, in 
1885. He studied sculpture at the Reale Accademia di Belle Arti of 
Carrara and the Istituto di Belle Arti of Rome. 

Honors: Prix de Rome, Reale Accademia of Carrara, 1905; prize 
for The Slinger, International Exposition, Parma, Italy, 1907; Mrs. H. 
P. Whitney prize for War Competition. 

MEMBERSHIP: New York Architectural League; National Sculpture 
Society; Circolo Artistico Internazionale di Roma. 

Works: portrait of Master Norman Lane; The Slinger, life-size 
statue, Gallery of Modern Art, Carrara, Italy; children of Mrs. 
Fairbanks, bronze bas-relief; Head of a Youth; Young Mother, 
bronze group; Female Torso; Fountain of the Golden Age. His spe- 
cialty is portraits, and home and garden fountains. 


151 


ELEN RY AG STE See ae Bava 


HENRY AUGUSTUS LUKEMAN was born in Richmond, 
Va., in 1872. He was a pupil of Launt Thompson and Daniel C. 
French in New York, and worked under Falguiére at the Ecole des 
Beaux-Arts, Paris. 

Honors: bronze medal, Louisiana-Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Academy of 
Design, associate. 

Works: William McKinley, Adams, Mass., and Dayton, O.; Manu, 
Appellate Court, New York City; four figures, Royal Bank building, 
Montreal, Can.; four figures, Brooklyn Institute Museum, and Custom 
House, Columbus, O.; Prof. Joseph Henry, Princeton, N. J; “Kit” 
Carson, Trinidad, Colo.; Straus memorial, New York City, 1915; U.S. 
Grant memorial, San Diego, Cal.; Soldiers monument, Somerville, 
Mass.; statue, Franklin Pierce, Concord, N. H.; monument, Women 
of the Confederacy, Raleigh, N. C.; Gen. Wm. Shepard, Westfield, 
Mass.; Soldiers memorial, Red Hook Park, Brooklyn, N. Y.; War 
memorial, Central High School, Springfield, Mass.; equestrian 
statues—, Gen. D. McM. Gregg, Reading, Pa., 1922; Francis Asbury, 
Washington, D. C., to be erected early in 1923. 


152 


FRANCIS ASBURY. BY He AUGUST USHEUKEMAN 


153 


VENUS AND ADONIS BY FREDERICK W. MACMONNIES 


154 


eel baha@onvy pelvic M ON NILES 


FREDERICK W. MacMoONNIES was born in Brooklyn, 

N. Y., in 1863. He entered the studio of Augustus Saint-Gaudens in 
1880, and was a pupil of the National Academy of Design and the Art 
Students League. He also worked in Munich, and under Falguiére 
at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and in the latter’s private studio. 

Honors: honorable mention for his Diana, Paris Salon, 1899; 
second medal (highest medal given to foreigners), Paris Salon, 1891, 
for the statues, Nathan Hale, New York, and J. S. T. Stranahan, 
Brooklyn; medal, World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, III., 
1893; first class gold medal, Antwerp, 1894; grand prize of honor, In- 
ternational Exposition, Paris, 1900; honorable mention for painting, 
Paris Salon, 1901 and 1902; Chevalier of the Legion of Honor, 18096. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, academician; New 
York Architectural League; American Academy of Arts and Letters. 

Works: Nathan Hale, City Hall Park, New York City ; three life-size 
Bronze angels, ot. Paul’s Church, New-York; James S. T. Stranahan, 
Prospect Park, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Pan of Rohallion, Fine Arts Academy, 
Buffalo, N. Y.; Faun with Heron; Sir Henry Vane, Boston Public 
Library, Boston, Mass.; colossal fountain, World’s Columbian Ex- 
position, Chicago, Ill.; Bacchante with Infant Faun, Metropolitan 
Museum of Art, New York, and Luxembourg Museum, Paris; two 
pediments, Bowery Bank, New York; four spandrils, Washington 
Arch, New York; Venus and Adonis; Cupid; Victory, West Point, 
N. Y.; central bronze door and statue of Shakespeare, Library of 
Congress, Washington, D. C.; Pioneer monument, Denver, Colo.; 
bronze group, Pax Victrix, 1905; Army and Navy, group for Soldiers 
and Sailors Arch, and Quadriga, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, 1900; 
equestrian statues—, Gen. Slocum, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Gen. G. B. 
McClellan, Washington, D. C.; Inspiration and Truth, two statues, 
N. Y. Public Library; portrait statue of a Young Girl, 1911; Princeton 
Battle Monument, Princeton, N. J., 1922; fountain, Civic Virtue, 
City Hall, New York, 1922. 


155 


WATER BABY BY CAROL BROOKS MACNEIL 


COANAOML DEI NMOMOH AGS TUE Wenn taid ab 


GAR OU BROOKS VUAGNELTL was born in Chicago, IIl., 
in 1871. She was a pupil of the Art Institute of Chicago and of 
Lorado Taft; also of MacMonnies and Injalbert in Paris. 

Honors: honorable mention, International Exposition, Paris, 
1900; bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 1904. 

MemsersuiP: National Sculpture Society; National Society of 
Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: busts—, Madame X, Paris; Constance; Betty; Father 
Maher; Father Brooks; Elizabeth Gibson; Brothers; Marcel; Bueno 
Norte; Thad Dean; statuettes—, Giotta Giovane; Vasoviana; Cloudy 
Day; Foolish Virgin; Springsong; First Lesson; Moth; Farewell 
to the Fairies; Water Baby; Two Larks; Snowflakes; Mermaid; Windy 
Day; fountain, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 1904. 


157 


HERMON A. MacNEIL 


HERMON A. MACNEIL was born in Everett, Mass., in 
1806. He was a pupil of Chapu at the Académie Julien, and of Falgu- 
iére at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. He taught modeling and 
drawing for three years at Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y., and was 
instructor at the Art Institute of Chicago, at Pratt Institute, Brook- 
lyn, and elsewhere, as well as at the American Academy in Rome. 

Honors: Roman Rinehart scholarship, 1896-1900; designers’ medal, 
World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; silver medal, Interna- 
tional Exposition, Paris, 1900; gold medal, Pan-American Exposition, 
Buffalo, 1901; silver medal, Charleston Exposition, 1902; commemora- 
tive medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; 
gold medal, Panama-Pacific Exposition, 1915; medal of honor for 
sculpture, New York Architectural League, 1917. 

MemBersuHIP: National Institute of Arts and Letters; National 
Sculpture Society; New York Architectural League; National Acad- 
emy of Design, academician, 1900. 

Works: Sun Vow and Primitive Chant, Metropolitan Museum, 
New York; Coming of the White Man, City Park, Portland, Ore.; 
McKinley memorial, Columbus, O.; Soldiers and Sailors monument, 
Whitinsville, Mass.; Soldier and Sailors memorial, Washington 
Park, Albany, N. Y.; Gen. Washington, Washington Arch, New York; 
Moqui Prayer for Rain, Art Institute, Chicago; four historical figures 
for State Capitol, Hartford, Conn.; Ezra Cornell monument, Cornell 
University, Ithaca, N. Y.; busts,—Samuel Parris; John S. Kennedy, 
New York Public Library; Lincoln; John Burroughs, etc. In former 
years he has made a specialty of Indian subjects, but more recently 
of large monumental works. 


158 


INTO THE UNKNOWN, FIGURE FOR SEAL OF NATIONAL SCULPTURE 
SOCIETY, BY HERMON A. MACNEIL 


159 


DIANA BY PAUL MANSHIP 


160 


PAUL MANSHIP 


PAUL MANSHIP was born in St. Paul, Minn., in 1885. 
He studied at the St. Paul Institute of Art, and the Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts; he won the Prix de Rome, American Academy 
in Rome, 1909-1912. 

Honors: Helen Foster Barnett prize, National Academy of Design, 
foieerand) 1017; George I). Widener gold medal, Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts, 1914; gold medal, Panama-Pacific Internation- 
al Exposition, San Francisco, Cal., 1915; medal, American Institute 
GteArchitects, 1921. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, academician; Nation- 
al Sculpture Society; New York Architectural League. 

Works: Centaur and Nymph, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New 
York; bronze fountain, The Duck Girl, Fairmount Park, Philadel- 
phia, Pa.; Centaur and Dryad, and Flight of Night, Detroit Institute 
of Arts, Detroit, Mich.; Indian and Pronghorn Antelope, and Dancing 
Girl and Fawns, Art Institute of Chicago; Playfulness, Minneapolis 
Institute of Art; Dancer and Gazelles, Cleveland Museum, also, 
Luxembourg, Paris, and Corcoran Art Gallery, Washington, D. C.; 
J. P. Morgan memorial, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; 
Revolutionary Soldier, Dansville, Il.; Pauline; The Little Brother, 
relief; Air. 


161 


AO WTS a ViEAg Yc EAR: 


Louris MAYER was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1869. 
He was a pupil of Benjamin Constant and Laurens in Paris, and stud- 
ied in Weimar and Munich. 

Honors: bronze medal for sculpture, Art Institute, St. Paul, 
Minn.; silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San 
Francisco, Calitsa1ors. 

MEMBERSHIP: International Society of Arts and Letters. 

Works: portrait busts—, Henry B. Snell; Dr. Gilbert Reid. 


162 


esehelue Weer Atel MiAny @ KR 


FA RIRIDe telly Ail Ienvl A YOR Was bom in salem, Mass., in 
1868. She studied at the Cowles Art School in Boston under Dennis 
Bunker and Henry H. Kitson. She is now instructor in modeling, 
Miss Fine’s School, Princeton, N. J. 

Honors: silver medal, Exposition, Atlanta, Ga., 1895. 

Works: portrait busts and reliefs; she is now engaged on two tablets 
in memory of her husband, Dr. Alfred G. Mayor, one to be placed on 
the grounds of Carnegie Institute Laboratory, Florida, the other in 
Guyot Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, N. J. 


MINNA McCANN 


MinNA McCann was born in London, England. She 
studied at the Municipal School of Art, Manchester, and the Royal 
College of Art, London. 

Honors: two National medals. 

MEMBERSHIP: Associate Royal College of Art, London. 

Works: statuette, Echo; Fate. Her specialty is portrait busts, 
statuettes, garden fountains and decorative figures. 


163 


EDWARD McCARTAN 


EpwARD McCARTAN was born in Albany, N. Y., in 1878. 
He studied at the Art Students League, New York, and the Ecole 
des Beaux-Arts, Paris. 

Honors: Helen Foster Barnett prize for sculpture, National 
Academy of Design, 1912; George D. Widener gold medal, Pennsyl- 
vania Academy of Fine Arts, 1916; medal of honor, New York Archi- 
tectural League, 1923. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society Allied Artists of Ameri- 
ca; New York Architectural League; National Academy of Design, 
associate. 

Works: Girl Drinking from a Shell; Youth; Pan, bronze fountain 
figure, Albright Gallery, Buffalo, N. Y.; Eugene Field memorial, 
Lincoln Park, Chicago, Ill.; garden figure, Spirit of the Woods, Glen 
Cove, L. |. He has made numerous small bronzes. 


164 


DIANA BY EDWARD MCCARTAN 


105 


BOY ~SCOUT BY SRV TAIT MCKENZIE 


166 


RemiPAdeeM Ck EN 2, PE 


Ree leat Do aVcekKse Nate. was born in Almonte, Canada, in 
1867. He began his work in sculpture in 1902 with four masks, 
illustrating the progress of fatigue, and a statuette, The Sprinter, 
done to certain measurements. He lectured on artistic anatomy at 
the Montreal Art School, Harvard University and during the Olympic 
Lecture course, at the St. Louis Exposition, 1904. He is Professor of 
Physical Education at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

Honors: honorable mention, Panama-Pacific International Ex- 
position, 1915; Olympic medal, a special medal from the King of 
Sweden, for his medal, Joy of Effort, on the wall of the stadium at 
Stockholm, Sweden. 

Works: The Sprinter, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, England; 
The College Athlete; The Competitor, The Supple Juggler, Metropoli- 
tan Museum of Art, New York; The Boxer; The Relay; The On- 
slaught, a football group; Youthful Franklin, and heroic statue, 
Rev. George Whitfield, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 
Pa.; Fountain of the Laughing Children; war memorials and statues 
—, Blighty; Capt. Guy Drummond, Canadian War Museum; Col. 
George H. Baker, Dominion House of Parliament, Ottawa, Can.; Rad- 
nor Township memorial, St. Davids, Pa.; Volunteer, Almonte, 
Canada; Homecoming, victory memorial to men of Cambridgeshire, 
1922, Cambridge, Eng.; also many portraits in low relief, and medals. 


107 


Bei AGN OeR eM ge Vieiala PAN 


ELEANOR M. MELLON was born in Philadelphia, Pa., in 
1894. She studied sculpture under Victor Salvatore and A. A. 
Weinman and also at the Art Students League under Robert Aitken. 
She has since studied with Edward McCartan. 


JOH NE GAR EDS Eee VGE GEN Daa 


Joun C. MEYENBERG was born in’ Tell’ City, giao 
1860. He studied Swiss wood-carving under his father, drawing 
and sculpture under Thomas S. Noble and L. F. Rebisso in the Cin- 
cinnati Art Academy, and sculpture under Jules Thomas, Ecole des 
Beaux-Arts, Paris. 

Works: Col. H. Clay Egbert memorial, Ft. Thomas, Ky.;pediment, 
Carnegie Library, Covington, Ky.; busts—, Benn Pitman; Theodore 
F. Hallam, City Hall, Covington, Ky.; monument to Christopher 
Latham Sholes, Milwaukee, Wis. 


168 


HELEN BY ELEANOR M. MELLON 


169 


_ 


ALVIN WILLIAM MEYER 


ALVIN W. MEYER was born in Bartlett, Ill., in 1892. He 
studied at the Maryland Institute, and the Rinehart School of Sculp- 
ture, Baltimore, Md., and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 
Philadelphia, Pa. He was visiting student at the American Academy 
in Rome, Italy, for one year. 

Honors: Cresson travelling scholarship, Pennsylvania Academy 
of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pa. 
MEMBERSHIP: Charcoal Club. 


LAGE UES UE ODN Oe 


Pours MiLiONE was born in Padua, Italy, in 1884. He 
studied in Philadelphia at the School of Industrial Art, 1900-1904, 
and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1904-1908. 

Honors: Edmund Stewardson prize for sculpture, 1904, and 
Cresson travelling scholarship, 1907, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine 
Arts. He is instructor in modeling at the Pennsylvania Museum 
and School of Industrial Art. 

MEMBERSHIP: American Federation of Arts; Pennsylvania Acad- 
emy of Arts; Art Alliance of America. 

Works: memorial panel, William Wallace Gilchrist, Academy 
of Music; memorial, Joseph Smith, Eden Hall, Torresdale, Pa.; 
panel, Daniel M. Stern; war memorial, Laramie, Wyo.; pediment, 
Germantown High School, Philadelphia, Pa.; Wayside Shrine mem- 
orial, Wissahickon, Pa. 

He specializes in sculpture in stone. 


vA 


JOSEP El eIVEASS VV Dee iets: 


Jo MAXWELL MTLUER was. born in’ Baltimore inviog: 
He was a pupil of the Maryland Institute, the Rinehart School of 
Sculpture, and the Charcoal Club, Baltimore, Md. He studied 
also at the Académie Julien under Verlet. 

Honors: gold medal of honor, Maryland Institute School of Art 
and Design, 1897; Rinehart travelling scholarship, 1900-1905; 
honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1902; silver medal, Louisiana Pur- 
chase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Charcoal Club. 

Works: Cardinal Gibbons, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 
Philadelphia, Pa., and Metropolitan Museum, New York; Ishmael, 
St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, Mo.; Parting of Orpheus and Eury- 
dice, Peabody Institute, Baltimore, Md.; bust of a Lady, Walters 
Gallery, Baltimore, Md.; monument to French Soldiers, Annapolis, 
Md.; School Children, Baltimore, Md.; monument to the Confederate 
Women of Maryland, Baltimore, Md.; Daniel C. Gilman memorial, 
Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.; World War monument, 
Wilmington, N. C. 


ig 


MAXWELL MILLER 


173 


DIAVNGE COT tes GLEN AINE Bau |i 


ade din GME ID) INiednsiedt, 


BERTHOLD NEBEL was born in Switzerland in 1889. He 
studied sculpture at the Mechanics Institute, and the Art Students 
League, New York. He won the Prix de Rome of the American 
Academy in Rome and studied abroad from 1914-1917. 


THE WRESTLERS’ BY BERTHOLD NEBEL 


174 


SS ECGUERS De NE AN DROSS 


S1GURD NEANDROSS was born in Stavanger, Norway, in 
1871. He was a pupil of Cooper Union, New York, and P. S. Kroyer 
and Stefan Sinding in Copenhagen. 

Honors: honorable mention, collaborative competition, New York 
Architectural League, 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: statues—, Gen. George Washington Gowan, Pottsville, 
Pa.; Hon. Chauncey M. Depew, Peekskill, N. Y. 


ALLEN G. NEWMAN 


ALLEN G. NEWMAN was born in New York City, in 1875. 

He worked in J. Q. A. Ward’s studio, 1897-1901, and studied at 
the National Academy of Design. 

Honors: National Arts Club prize for Valor medal. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; American Numismatic 
Society; Beaux-Arts Institute of Design; National Arts Club. 

Rvs ieniiiker, otaten Island, N: Y., and Buffalo; N. Y.: 
Peace monument, Atlanta, Ga.; Day and Night, statues, Harriman 
Bank, New York City; Immaculate Conception, Church, New York 
City; The Pioneer, Salem, Oregon; monument, Women of the South, 
Jacksonville, Fla.; Doughboy monument, Pittsburgh, Pa.; fountain, 
Cornwall, N. Y.; Henry Hudson monument, Spuyten Duyvil, N. Y.; 
statues—, Gen. Oates, Montgomery, Ala.; |. Marks, Meridian, Miss. ; 
Grier monument, Lead, So. Dakota; Lord Harris, Caracas, Venezuela; 
bas-reliefs—, Joel Chandler Harris, Uncle Remus monument, Atlanta, 
Ga.; heroic bust, Cardinal O’Connell, Lowell, Mass. 


175 


CG HPAshala omit le Nae om Negi cles 


CHARLES Hy Nie Us qwass born in. Cincinnati ©) ae 
1855. He studied at the McMichen school, Cincinnati, and in the 
Royal Academy, Munich and Rome. 

Honors: gold medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 
1901; gold medal, South Carolina Interstate Exposition, Charleston, 
S. C., 1902; gold medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904. . 

MEMBERSHIP: New York Architectural League; National Academy 
of Design, academician; National Institute of Arts and Letters. 

Works: statues—, Pres. Harrison, Indianapolis, Ind.; Dr. Hahne- 
mann, Washington, D. C.; Garfield, Cincinnati, O.; Wm. McKinley, 
Canton, O.; John Paul Jones, Washington, D> G@s2@onieere 
Buffalo, N. Y.: Caestus, and Athlete with Strigil or Phesscraper 
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Astor memorial doors, 
Trinity Church, New York City; Embarkation and Debarkation, 
Hoboken, N. J.; Planting the Standard of Democracy, Newark, N. J.; 
statue of Abraham Lincoln, Buffalo, N. Y. 


176 


PRAN CIS SCOT KE YSMONUMENTBYSCHAK VES ee N LEE AUS 


GIULIO NOVANI 


GiuL1o NovaAN! was born in Massa, Italy, in 1889. He 
studied at the Royal Academy of Massa, Carrara; Beaux-Arts 
Institute of Design, New York. 

Works: bust of My Father; portrait of Myself; bust of a Negro; 
The Shipwrecked, Stimson memorial; marble medallions—, Rev. Tal- 
bot; M. Ammerman; and many others. 


JAMES NOVELLI 


JAMES NOVELLI was born in Sulmona, province of Aquila, 
Italy, in 1885. In 1890 he came to New York. He returned to 
Italy in 1903 and studied under Julio Monteverde, Ettore Ferrari, 
and Silvio Sbricoli. He graduated at the Royal Academy of Rome 
in 1908. 

Honors: honorable mention, International Exposition, Paris, 1906. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Motherhood group, and Rock of Ages, Durham, N. C.; 
bronze crucifix, Holy Name Cemetery, Jersey City, N. J.; bronze 
doors, Sigman mausoleum, and Schmuck mausoleum, Woodlawn 
Cemetery, New York; bronze door, Bigham mausoleum, Hawthorne, 
New York; bronze door, La Gioia mausoleum, Calvary Cemetery, 
New York; war memorials, Saratoga Park, Brooklyn, N. Y., and Persh- 
ing Field, Jersey City, N. J.; Rowan panel, bronze, Woodlawn Cem- 
etery, New York; Lamattina Guerriero memorial, of bronze and gran- 
ite, Calvary Cemetery, New York; bronze busts—, Thomas ].Stewart, 
Julius Berger, Irving Green, Margaret Lawson, Annita Novarra; por- 
trait reliefs—, Charlotte Brainard, Charles G. Brainard, Dorothy 
Langley, bronze; portrait of my grandmother, terra cotta; portrait 
of my father, terra cotta; portrait bust, P. Anderson. 


179 


ANDREW O’CONNOR 8r. 


ANDREW O’CONNOR Sr.was born in Lanark, Scotland, in 
1846. He studied in Europe. 
Works: His works include a few statues, a large number of por- 
trait busts and medallions in marble and bronze, and some monu- 
ments. 


AN DR EW ii @.OuNGN Gk Solin: 


ANDREW O’ CONNOR JR. was born in Worcester, Mass., in 

1874. He was a pupil of his father, Andrew O’Connor, the sculptor. 

Honors: second medal, Paris Salon, 1906 (highest medal given to 
foreigners at the Salon). 

Works: eleven marble statues, Essex County Court House, New- 
ark, N. J.; central bronze doors and tympanum, St. Bartholomew’s 
Church, New York; marble portrait, Edward Tuck, Luxembourg 
Museum, Paris; statue of Lincoln, Springfield, IIl.; bas-relief, Library 
of J. P. Morgan, New York; soldier, Worcester, Mass., 1898; Gen. 
Tiscum monument, Arlington Cemetery, Washington, D. C.; Gen. 
Thomas monument, Tarrytown, N. Y.; bronze statue, Gen. Lawton, 
Indianapolis, Ind.; marble statue, Gen. Lew Wallace, Capitol, 
Washington, D. C.; monument to Gov. John A. Johnson, St. Paul, 
Minn.; Roosevelt memorial, Glenview, IIl.; bronze head, The Virgin; 
statuette, Justice; Abraham Lincoln, bust, Metropolitan Museum of 
Art, New York. 


180 


fg 


COMMODORE JOHN BARRY BY ANDREW O’CONNOR Lie 


181 


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EDWARD C. MERSHON MEMORIAL FOUNTAIN 
BY WILLARD D. PADDOCK 


182 


VV ae ee ee Wm hay EB Ne RAD) O.C K 


Vina Rie emery OC K was) born ins Brooklyn, N. Y., in 
1873. He was a pupil of Herbert Adams in New York, Pratt In- 
stitute in Brooklyn, and of Courtois and Girardot in Paris. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Allied Artists of Ameri- 
ca; Guild of New York Artists; New York Architectural League. 

Works: Orr and Jessup relief, New York Chamber of Commerce; 
The Whittier, and Grant memorials, Saginaw, Mich.; George Seward 
memorial; Noah Webster memorial, Amherst College, Amherst, 
Mass.; Alfred Noble memorial, Engineering Societies Building, New 
York City; Edward C. Mershon memorial fountain; numerous busts, 
figures, fountains, sun-dials and statuettes. 


183 


BAGS eK GAMe Ate eat 


BASHKA PAEFF was born in Minsk, Russia, in 1893. She 
was a student at the Massachusetts Normal Art School, and the 
School of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. 

MEMBERSHIP: Guild of Boston Artists; Detroit Society of Arts and 
Crafts; Boston Society of Architects; Society of Arts and Crafts, 
Boston. 

Works: portrait bas-reliefs, bronze, William Dixon Weaver; Jane 
Addams, Hull House, Chicago, IIl.; James Barr Ames, Law Building, 
Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.; Justice Oliver Wendell Hol- 
mes; Justice Louis D. Brandeis; Sherman L. Whipple; Ames Hersey 
Whipple, Town Hall, New London, Conn.; Arthur Foote; fountains—, 
Mother and Child; John E. Warren memorial fountain; Child and 
Dolphin, wall fountain; portrait busts—, Nancy Cox; J. Macy 
Willets, Jr.; Julius Rosenwald, Jr.; Marmaduke Warren, Jr.; Baby 
Francis; Roland D. Sawyer; Anthony John Philpott; Chaplains’ 
memorial tablet, State House, Boston, Mass.; also sun-dials, statuettes 
and bas-relief portraits of animals. 


184 


Eyl peor Om ARES ONS 


Poprru BARR PTTO PARSONS was born in Houston, Va. 
She was a pupil of the Art Students League, New York, under Daniel 
C. French and George Grey Barnard. 
- MeEmBErRsuIP: National Sculpture Society; National Association of 
Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: fountains—, Turtle Baby, Duck Baby, Duck Girl; figure, 
Liberal Arts Building, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; memorial monument, Cemetery, St. Paul, Minn.; memorial 
fountain for John Galloway, Public Park, Memphis, Tenn.; Big Duck. 


185 


RIO TSASNGD se iiLN sl) N Seeiee sae 


R. Hi1NTON PERRy was born in New York City in 1870. 
He studied at the Art Students League, New York, 1885-1888; at 
the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, and Académies Julien, and Delacleuse, 
Paris, working under Gérome, Chapu and Puech. He specialized 
in the study of portrait painting in Paris and has followed it as a 
profession in conjunction with sculpture. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: bas-relief, Sibyls, and fountain of Neptune, Library of 
Congress, Washington, D. C.; statues—, Gen. George S. Greene and 
Gen. Wadsworth, battlefield of Gettysburg, Pa.; New York State 
monument for Lookout Mountain, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Dr. Ben- 
jamin Rush monument, Washington, D. C.; frieze, New Amster- 
dam Theatre, New York City; New York State memorial, Ander- 
sonville, Ga.; Langdon doors, Buffalo Historical Society, Buffalo, 
N. Y.; statue, Gen. Curtis, Ogdensburg, N. Y.; equestrian statue; 
Gen. John B. Castleman, Louisville, Ky.; statue, Pennsylvania, dome 
of Capitol, Harrisburg, Pa.; statue, Circe; lions, Connecticut Avenue 
Bridge, Washington, D. C.; soldier monument, 38th Inf., The Rock 
of the Marne, Syracuse, N. Y. 


186 


BOYRW ihe ELST OWN TAN we Biy same bul Nel. © INGE RuROYs 


187 


BOY OF TRE, PiAV 2. BY ATLL lOm et GG) Imer 


188 


elehintOer eG t RL II 


Pa Oma Gc keris was pornin Massa, Italy, in 1866. 
He studied at the Accademia San Luca, Rome, Italy. 

Honors: bronze medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 
1901; silver medal, South Carolina Interstate Exposition, Charleston, 
Se 1002; silver medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1912; gold medal, Panama- 
Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; George 
D. Widener gold medal, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 1917. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate; New York 
Architectural League; Italian American Art Association, (president) ; 
Accademia dei Virtuosi del Pantheon, Rome. 

WorKS: monuments—, Maine memorial, Central Park, New York 
City; Mac Donoyh, New Orleans, La.; Firemen’s memorial, River- 
side Drive, New York City; Dancing Faun, and Head of Boy, Fine 
Arts Academy, Buffalo,.N. Y.; Apgar memorial; The Pariah; A Soul; 
Flower of the Alps; Portrait of an Artist; pediment, Frick house, New 
York City; Mater Consolatrix; An Outcast. 


189 


Bah Oei ee; Glieiialed 


FuRIO,PICCIRILED was born vine Massa; Jtalyaun steer 
He studied at the Accademia San Luca, Rome, Italy. 

Honors: honorable mention, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 
N. Y., 1901; silver medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MemBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate; New York 
Architectural League; Italian American Art Association. 

Works: portrait of his Sister; Madonna and Child; Narciso; four 
groups for the Court of the Seasons, Panama-Pacific Exposition; 
Eurydice; statue, Pierre Gautier de la Varenne, Winnipeg, Canada; 
and also many minor works. 


MADONNA BY FURIO PICCIRILLI 


19] 


BRONZE, COCKS BY HORACE RICCI Det 


192 


BON ANC Ie) TCE Aa baBy 


bio Re Gem eG Riise Was) DOriine WVlassa, italy, 111.1972; 
He studied in New York City under Roiné. 

Works: interior decorations on the Frick house, New York City; 
decorations in marble, stone, and majolica on the Clark house, New 
York City. He is now working on the models for the exterior decora- 
tions of the New Court House, N. Y. City. 


193 


ALBIN POLASEK 


ALBIN-POLASEK was born-in Frenstat, Czechoslovakia. 
He was a pupil of the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts and of the 
American Academy in Rome. He is head of the department of 
sculpture, Art Institute, Chicago. 

Honors: Cresson travelling scholarship, 1907-1909; Prix de 
Rome, American Academy in Rome, 1910-1913; honorable mention, 
Paris Salon, 1913; George D. Widener gold medal, Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts, 1914; silver medal, Panama-Pacific Inter- 
national Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; Logan medal and 
Shaffer prize, Art Institute, Chicago, 1917; medal, Milwaukee Insti- 
tute, 1917. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Society of Western 
Sculptors; New York Architectural League; Chicago Society of 
Artists. 

Works: Fantasy, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; bust of 
Frank D. Millet, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, 
Pa.; Sower, Art Institute, Chicago, Ill., and Institute of Arts, 
Detroit, Mich. 


194 


MAN CHISELING HIS OWN DESTINY BY ALBIN POLASEK 


195 


~~ 


TS 


Af 


PIL Le ON INMBA EAR TOM TINO Od 


ALEXANDER PORTNOFF was born in Russia, in 1887. 
He was a pupil of Charles Grafly at the Pennsylvania Academy of 
Fine Arts. He is instructor in the Graphic Sketch Club, Philadel- 
Dita. Pa. 

Honors: Cresson European scholarship, 1912, 1913, Pennsylvania 
Academy of Fine Arts; honorable mention, Panama-Pacific Inter- 
national Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; American 
Federation of Arts. 

Works: Prof. Alonzo Brown; Prof.Charles H. La Wall; J. D. Toloff. 


RENEE PRAHAR 


RENEE PRAHAR was born in New York City in 1880 of 
Bohemian antecedents. She studied in Paris with Bourdelle and 
exhibited at the Salon. 

Honors: prize for sculpture, National Association of Women 
Painters and Sculptors, 1922. 

Works: Impression; Jaguars (unfinished); bronze, A Russian 
Dancer, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City. 


197 


ALL EX AGNIID Ee Ree Pell VGLES ale he eae Cai 


A. PHIMISTER PROCTOR was born in Bozanquit, Can- 
ada, in 1862. Hestudied at the National Academy of Design and Art 
Students League, New York, and under Puech and Inyjalbert in Paris. 

Honors: medal, World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, III., 
1893; Rinehart travelling scholarship, 1895-1900; gold medal, Inter- 
national Exposition, Paris, 1900; gold medal for sculpture, Louisiana 
Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; gold medal of honor, New 
York Architectural League; 1911; gold medal, Panama-Pacific In- 
ternational Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, academician; National 
Sculpture Society; National Institute of Arts and Letters; New York 
Architectural League. 

Works: Panthers, Prospect Park, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Puma, Faun, 
Dog with Bone, and Fate, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; 
Indian Warrior, Brooklyn Institute Museum; Tigers, Princeton Uni- 
versity; Buffaloes and Tigers on bridges, Washington, D. C.; Morse, 
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Lions, McKinley monument, 
Buffalo, N. Y.; Pioneer monument, Campus of University of Oregon, 
Eugene, Ore.; equestrian statue, Col. Roosevelt as Rough Rider, Port- 
land, Ore. 


198 


INDIAN WAKRIOR® BY VA] PHIMIST ER] PROCTOR 


199 


BRENDA PUTNAM 


BRENDA PUTNAM was born in Minneapolis, Minn., in 
1890. She began studying sculpture at the age of twelve. In 1907 
she studied drawing under Paxton and Hale at the Boston Art 
Museum School. As pupil of Bela Pratt, she studied modeling and 
anatomy, and worked for two years under James E. Fraser at the Art 
Students League, New York. At the Corcoran Art School, Washing- 
ton, D. C., she studied drawing from life under E. C. Messer. 

Honors: honorable mention for Water Lily Baby, Art Institute, 
Chicago; Helen Foster Barnett prize for Sun-dial, National Academy 
of Design, 1922. 

Memser: National Sculpture Society; National Association of 
Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: Sun-dial; Water Lily Baby; marble figure, memorial to 
Anne Simon, Rock Creek Cemetery, Washington, D. C.; fountain 
group of two life-size children, private estate, Cleveland, O.; life- 
size bronze, Pigeon Girl; marble bust of boy and relief in stone, in 
private possession, Washington, D. C.; portrait bust, Pablo Casals, 
Hispanic Museum, New York; also many portrait reliefs of children. 


201 


MOEN 1D esas NEN 


EDMOND Te OUINN wass borne im Philadelphia, Pages 
was a pupil of Thomas Eakins in Philadelphia, and of Injalbert in 
lea bias 

Honors: silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Academy of 
Design, associate; New York Architectural League; National In- 
stitute of Arts and Letters. 

Works: statues—, John Howard, Williamsport, Pa.; Zoroaster, 
Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences; reliefs on Battle monument, 
King’s Mountain, S. C.; bust, Edgar Allan Poe, Fordham, New York; 
figures on Athletic Club, Pittsburgh, Pa.; statuette, Nymph, Met- 
ropolitan Museum of Art, New York; statue, Maj.-Gen. John E. 
Pemberton, Vicksburg National Military Park, Vicksburg, Miss.; 
statue of Edwin Booth as Hamlet, Gramercy Park, New York; bust, 
Prof. Hooper, Brooklyn Institute Museum; War memorial, New 
Rochelle; Ni Yoo 1o215sbust) 2) athens alone Brooklyn Institute 
Museum; panels, rotunda, Hartford Fire Insurance Building, Hart- 
ford, Conn.; bust, Edwin Markham; portraits—, Albert Sterner, Mrs. 
Albert Sterner; bronze bust, Capt. Allan Pollock. 


VICTORY, 


Ch | 
gueeer & 


WORLD WAR MEMORIAL, BY EDMOND T. QUINN 


203 


i AMIRCIN Ye IESE AIS) Ieee 


RaeRRey lene ArUilewas Dorin Easton, Pa., in 1883. He 
studied under F. E. Elwell and at the Art Students League under 
F. V. DuMond, and at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts under 
Charles Grafly. 

-Mempersuip: American Federation of Arts. 

Works: Green memorial statue, Easton, Pa.; monument to Martyrs 
of the Maine (Hail, Martyrs’ statue), Northampton Co., Pa.; Soldiers 
monument (Old Glory statue), West Chester, Pa.; The Face of Lin- 
coln; heroic bust of Beethoven; The Vision; statuette of Lafayette; 
military panel, Valor-Defensive; Venture; Sunlight on the Wave; 
Mermaid Playing; The Hour of Twilight; portrait of Rudolph Black- 
burg. 


SPE WORSE Wel ea eM Ba Oa 6 


STEVEN REBECK was born in Cleveland, O., in 1891. 

He studied at the Cleveland School of Art under Karl Bitter and Carl 
A. Heber; and at the National Academy of Design and the Beaux- 
Arts Institute of Design, New York. 

Honors: Penton medal, Cleveland Museum of Art, for portrait 
bust. 

MemBeErRSHIP: Cleveland Sculpture Society. 

Works: worked on group for Manhattan Bridge, New York; 
statue, Shakespeare, Cleveland, O. His specialty is portraits. 


205 


Re Gras) ebay ile, 


RIcHARD H. RECCHIA was born in Quincy, Mass., in 
1885. Hestudied at the School of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, 
at the Académie Julien in Paris, and in Italy. 

Honors: bronze medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
San) Erancisco, Galif.e1 015. 

MEMBERSHIP: Guild of Boston Artists; Copley Society. 

Works: bas-relief portrait of Gov. Curtis Guild, State House, 
Boston, Mass.; Architecture, panel figure, Boston Museum of Fine 
Arts; Red Cross panel, Musée de l’Armée, Gallery Foch, Paris; bas- 
relief portraits—, Bela L. Pratt, H. E. Smith, F. C. Recchia, George 
Guest. 


UG Ce Yes Pa RELI ENG See alice rg 


Lucy PERKINS RIPLEY was born in Minnesota. She 

studied under Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Daniel C. French and Rodin. 

Honors: bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; Helen Foster Barnett prize, for statue, The Inner Voice, 
National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, 19109. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Association , 
of Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: bronze statue, The Inner Voice; Revelation; Dawn, 
reclining figure cast 1n lead; Seated Woman; Boy with Fish, fountain; 
Study, a group; Wall Niche; Contemplation. 


206 


CBUSOMESUSMe! de Weak Ted ed be Ixc ist OI GI4 


GEA TCONSION S UAV a talk 1 SO. Ue was. born ini St. Louis, 
Mo., in 1886. She was a pupil of the St. Louis School of Fine Arts 
under George J. Zolnay, and studied in Paris at the Académie 
Colarossi, and with Paul Bartlett and Injalbert. She exhibited at 
the Paris Salon, 1912. 

Honors: Meston prize, St. Louis Artists Guild, 1914, 1915; 
Halsey C. Ives prize, St. Louis Artists Guild, 1921. 

MEMBERSHIP: St. Louis Artists Guild; St. Louis Art League. 

Works: fountain for Wednesday Club, St. Louis, Mo.; fountains for 
G.S. Johns, and Mrs. C. L. Kennerly, St. Louis, Mo. Her specialty is 
decorative work and small bronzes. 


HibaaurigeNen vay) ene yerksC)'B NS ON 


HELEN AVERY ROBINSON was born in Louisville, Ken- 
tucky. She studied sculpture under Solon H. Borglum. 


207; 


ede de OMI NG He 1G He KO} IT Is! 


FREDERICK G? R. RovuH was born in’ Brooklyn Nay 
in 1872. He was a pupil at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna, 1892, 
and Academy of Fine Arts, Berlin. He was instructor in modeling 
at the National Academy of Design, 1915-1918. 

Honors: silver medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
1904; silver medal, Buenos Aires Exposition, Argentina, 1910; gold 
medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 
Calihentoise 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Academy of 
Design, academician; New York Architectural League; National 
Institute of Arts and Letters; New Society of Artists. 

Works: Polar Bear group; Princeton Tigers; head of a Morgan 
Horse; Troubadour: Cat: Meditation; In Central Parks) Porc 
Thus, a Study of Movement. 


208 


ISUUEISULANINIDY THULE, WSC TEIRIENDISIRIUCIS (Gr, 1 ICONS! 


200 


VICTORY, WARK MEMORIALS BY (CHARLES CARY VRUMS EN 


210 


(iene bom Ray RIUM Ss Bey * 


Asse Gun ver reuen S bay, was) born in? Bufialo, N, Y., 
in 1879, and died in August, 1922. He studied sculpture in Bos- 
ton and in Paris, 1902-1906. 

Honors: first prize for sculpture, New York Architectural League, 
1908; bronze medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San 
Baancisco, Calil., 1915, 

MEMBERSHIP: New York Architectural League; New Society of 
Artists; National Sculpture Society; Society of Animal Painters and 
Sculptors. 

Works: frieze, Indian Buffalo Hunt, on arch, Manhattan bridge, 
New York City; statue, The Pagan; Soldiers and Sailors memorial, 
Brownsville (Brooklyn), N. Y.; statue, Pizarro, Panama-Pacific In- 
ternational Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; The Centaur; The 
Old Virginian; White Bull; colored cement frieze of Athletes, Pelham 
Bay Park, N. Y. C.; series of sketches for frieze in colored cement, 
private estate, Long Island. 


* Deceased. 


ANTONIO SALEMME 


ANTONIO SALEMME was born in Gaeta, Italy, in 1892. 
He was first a pupil of the School of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, 
studying drawing and painting. He then took up sculpture and went 
to Rome, studying under Angelo Zanelli for seven years. 

MEMBERSHIP: New York Architectural League; National Sculpture 
Society. 

Works: bronze statuette, Prayer, Newark Free Public Library, 
Newark, N. J.; portrait, Mrs. W. A. Read; Old Scotch Woman; 
Robert Stein; Stanley Kimmel; statuette, A Florentine Lady; Study 
of an Old Scotch Lady. 


212 


We Neto AL Ee RaN ©) 


VON Cie Net AINE: RIN O was bornein Sicily, Italy, in’ 1893. 
He studied at the National Academy of Design under A. Sterling 
Calder and Hermon A. MacNeil, and at the Beaux-Arts Institute of 
Design, New York City. 

Honors: bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
eaneurancisco, Calif:, {915. 

Works: portraits—, Justice Hendrick, Supreme Court, New York 
City; John B. Stanchfield, New York City; H. J. Barrett; Head of an 
Old Man; Jeannette. His specialty is portraiture. 


25 


NA TGOM MDE SN EA enacts 


Victor’ D, SALVATORE was 2born) I ltaly arises 
He was a pupil of Charles Niehaus, Hermon A. MacNeil, and A. 
Phimister Proctor. 

Honors: bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
San Francisco, Calif., 1915; Helen Foster Barnett prize, National 
Academy of Design, 19109. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Head of an Old Lady; Study of a Young Girl; Study of an 
Old Man; Seeking; Youth; The Débutante. 


214 


MRS. CHAPMAN BY VICTOR D. SALVATORE 


ED WrAkeDeh EI eS AN Guia) 


EDWARD FIELD SANFORD was born in New York, in 
1886. He was a pupil at the Art Students League, the National 
Academy of Design, New York, and at the Académie Julien, Paris, 
and the Royal Academy, Munich. 

MemBERSHIP: New York Architectural League; Beaux-Arts In- 
stitute; National Arts Club. 

Works: Pegasus, bronze statuette, Rhode Island School of Design, 
Providence, R. I.; Charles Francis Adams memorial, Washington 
and Lee University, Lexington, Va.; Commemorative tablet, Columbia 
University, New York; Core memorial, Norfolk, Va.; two pediments, 
four heroic allegorical figures, and twenty bas-relief panels, Library 
and Office Building, California State Capitol, Sacramento, Calif. 


DialGr rave DE Rees AV LLL 


BRUCE WILDER SAVILLE was born in Quincy, Mass., 
in 1893. He studied at the Boston Normal Art School under Cyrus 
Dallin, and for a short time at the Boston Museum School of Art. 
He then entered the studio of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kitson with whom 
he studied for four years. He is now instructor in modeling at the 
Ohio State University, and at the Columbus Art School, Columbus, O. 

MEMBERSHIP: Boston Art Club; Boston Architectural Club. 

WorkKS: portrait busts,—Nathan Haskell Dole; Com. Evans, U.S. 
N.; Larz Anderson; Dr. William O. Thompson; three memorials to 
Civil War heroes, Vicksburg National Military Park, Vicksburg, 
Miss.; statue, John Hancock, Quincy, Mass.; memorial reliefs of 
Father Scanlon and Mgr. Curley, New York; Canadian Infantryman, 
St. John’s, N. F.; Forrester memorial relief, Worcester, Mass.; memo- 
rial to all our Wars, Palmyra, Maine; memorial to 1oist Infantry, 
26th Div., Westfield, Mass.; Civil War peace memorial, State House 
grounds, Columbus, O.; Victory, heroic figure in collaboration with 
Mossman, Chicopee, Mass.; World War memorial tablets, Upton 
and Quincy, Mass. 


EDWARD WARREN SAWYER 


EDWARD W. SAWYER was born in Chicago, IIl., in 1876. 
He studied at the Art Institute, Chicago, and also under Verlet 
at the Académie Julien, and Injalbert, Frémiet and Rodin, Paris. 
Honors: bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 
Mo., 1904; silver medal, International Exposition, Ghent, 1913; 
honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1914; bronze medal for medals, 
Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 
Works: medals—, in the Luxembourg Museum, Paris; Art In- 
stitute, Chicago; and the United States Mint. 


218 


ANTON SCHAAF 


ANTON SCHAAF was born in Milwaukee, Wis., in 1869. He 
was a pupil of Shirlaw, Cox, Beckwith and Saint-Gaudens. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architectu- 
ral League. 

Works: statue, Gen. Ord, Vicksburg Military Park, Vicksburg, 
Miss.; Glendale, and Ridgewood monuments, Brooklyn, N. Y.; 
Fourteenth Regiment monument, Brooklyn, N. Y.; World War 
memorials—, Prudential Insurance Co., Newark, N. J., and Central 
Congregational Church, Brooklyn, N. Y.; portrait relief, Robert 
Meredith, Tompkins Avenue Congregational Church, Brooklyn, N.Y. 


Eat oer We NB REG 


Pape CU 1eN BURG. Was born in St. Louis, “Mo., in 
1883. She studied at the St. Louis School of Fine Arts, under George 
J. Zolnay, with Charles Grafly of Philadelphia and Lewin Funcke at 
the Secessionist School, Berlin. 

Honors: bronze medal, Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, Seattle, 
Wash., 1900. 

MEMBERSHIP: St. Louis Artists Guild. 

Works: group, The Fugitives; The Idealists; Turtle fountain; also 
reliefs, busts and sketches from Mexican life. 


219 


EAN oooh UO) ley 


HANS SCHULER was born in Morange, Alsace-Lorraine, in 
1874. He studied at the Maryland Institute, the Charcoal Club and 
Rinehart School of Sculpture, Baltimore, Md.; also in the Académie 
Julien and atelier Verlet, Paris. 

Honors: gold medal, Maryland Institute, 1894; Charcoal Club 
scholarships; Rinehart scholarship for four years’ study in Paris, 
1900; gold medal, third class, Paris Salon, 1901; silver medal, 
Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; Avery prize, 
National Academy of Design, New York. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Maryland Institute; 
Charcoal Club; Municipal Art Society; School Arts League; Academy 
of Sciences, Baltimore, Md. 

Works: Ariadne, Walters Gallery, Baltimore, Md.; Paradise Lost; 
Pheidippides; Narcissus; portrait statues—, Gen. Samuel Smith, 
Hon. Pinckney White; busts—, Maj. Walter Reed, Sir Wm. Osler, 
Dr. J. F. Goucher, F. Mergenthaler, etc.; Buchanan memorial, Wash- 
ington, D. C.; Johns Hopkins monument, Baltimore, Md.; reliefs—, 
Dr. Daniel C. Gilman, Dr. Eccleston, etc. 


220 


DRa Ja Fe GOUCHERSBY HANS SCHULER 


22) 


hs (OE TMGY SC de Wa ea lyse aie 


J. OrtTo SCHWEIZER was born in Zurich, Switzerland, 
in 1863. He was a pupil of Tuiller, Paris, of the Art School in Zurich, 
and studied under Schilling at the Art School, Zurich. He was 
in Florence and Rome, 1889-1894. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Gen. Muhlenberg, and James B. Nicholson, Philadelphia, 
Pa.; Senator Clay, Marietta, Ga.; equestrian statue, Gen. Steuben, 
Milwaukee, Wis.; Gen. Mills monument, Gettysburg, Pa.; statue 
of Lincoln with four symbolical reliefs and the portrait medallions 
of Grant, Meade, Sherman, etc., Union League, Philadelphia, Pa.; 
Melchior Muhlenberg, with relief group, Germantown, Pa.; Joseph 
Johns fountain, Johnstown, Pa.; Adj.-Gen. T. J. Stewart, and Senator 
George T. Oliver, State Capitol, Harrisburg, Pa.; Abraham Lincoln, 
Generals Gregg and Pleaston, Pennsylvania State memorial, Gettys- 
burg, Pa.; Robert Schumann, Jersey City, N. J. 


223 


JANET SCUDDER 


JANET SCUDDER was born in Terre Haute, Ind., in 1873. 
She studied at the Cincinnati Art Academy under Louis J. Rebisso, 
and continued under Lorado Taft at the Art Institute, Chicago, and 
later at the Académies Vitti and Colarossi in Paris, finally becoming 
the pupil of Frederick MacMonnies. She is the first American woman 
to have her work purchased for the Luxembourg Museum, Paris. 

Honors: medal, World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, IIIL., 
1893; bronze medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 1904; 
honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1911; prize for sculpture, National 
Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, 1914; silver medal, 
Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Arts Club; 
National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors. 

Works: statue, Japanese Art, facade of Brooklyn Institute Muse- 
um; bronze, Frog Fountain, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; 
fountain, Young Diana; fountain, Fighting Boy, Art Institute, 
Chicago, IIl.; Tortoise Fountain, Peabody Institute, Baltimore, Md.; 
numerous fountains for private residences; many relief portraits and 
medals. 


224 


VICTORY BY JANET SCUDDER 


225 


[eC STNSIA@ENvES Elite sbl bse 


J. CLINTON SHEPHERD was born in Des Moines, Iowa, 
in 1888. Hestudied at the Chicago Art Institute and the Beaux-Arts 
Institute of Design. 

Works: The Broncho Twister; The Cayuse; The Maverick; The 
Night Herd. His specialty is Western life and animals. 


226 


ILI IE lel Syietdeid ye Way (OOM B: 


RUTH SHERWOOD was born in Chicago in 1889. She 
was a pupil of Albin Poldsek at the Art Institute of Chicago. 
Honors: Chicago Woman’s Aid prize, 1920, 1921; Robert Allerton 
prize; John Quincy Adams and Bryant Lathrop foreign travelling 
scholarships, 1921; honorable mention, Annual Exhibition of American 
Painters and Sculptors, 1922. 


EUGENIE F. SHONNARD 


EUGENIE F. SHONNARD was born in Yonkers in 1886. 
She started her artistic career at the New York School of Applied 
Design for Women, where she studied under M. Alphonse M. Mucha. 
In 1911 she went to Paris and studied sculpture under Rodin and 
Bourdelle, and exhibited at the Paris Salon, 1912 and 1913. 

Honors: second prize, Hartsdale Exhibition, 1910. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: His Majesty the Heron, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 
New York; Two Geese, Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, O.; 
portrait bust, Alphonse Mucha; Marabou; groups of decorative 
herons for a garden; A Heron, exhibited at Paris Salon, 1922; Le 
Chat, Paris Salon, 1922; figures of Brittany peasants. 


227) 


BUG NIRGY SM EeRSVVeleN => lth clo ayes 


Henry M. SHRADy was born in New York City in 1871, 
and died in April, 1922. He was self-taught in sculpture. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural 
League; National Academy of Design, associate; National Institute of 
Arts and Letters. 

Works: Grant memorial, Washington, D. C.; equestrian statues—, 
Gen. Washington at Valley Forge, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Gen. Williams, 
Detroit, Mich.; Gen. Robt. Lee, Charlottesville, Va.; William the 
Silent, Holland Society; Jay Cooke, Duluth, Minn.; life-size bas- 
relief portrait, Dr. St. John Roosa; portrait bust, Gen. Grant; numer- 
ous statuettes and bas-relief portraits. 


* Deceased. 


228 


AGVUYHS “W AUNAH Ad 


“TVIMOWAW LNVUD ‘dNOUD 


Ecclctaligl Weclivi 


220 


RA ap Sa 


Singh PBC eset 


THE SSLORM aN E Wey ORT POLICE, 


230 


ee 4 
J 


BY AMORY C. SIMONS- 


OURO SCHON TENE SE OMNIS 


POMC RS" (© ee O Nis swas) Dorm ein’ Charleston, S.C... in 
1869. He studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and 
with Dampt, Puech and Rodin in Paris. 

_ Honors: honorable mention, International Exposition, Paris, 1900; 
honorable mention, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 1901; silver 
medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; honor- 
able mention, Paris Salon, 1906; first prize for sculpture, American 
Art Association, Paris, 1907; honorable mention, Panama-Pacific 
International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915; Ellen P. Speyer 
memorial prize, National Academy of Design, 1922. 

MemBERsSuHIP: American Art Association, Paris. 

Works: Col. Cody; New York Fire Engine Horses. 


PP SaLAe I Seg hee 


ISMAEL SMITH was born in Barcelona, Spain, in 1886. 
He studied at the Ecole Nationale des Arts Décoratifs, Paris. Healso 
studied in the schools of Rafael Atche, Baixas, Querol, Benlliure, and 
others. | 

Honors: third class medal, International Exposition, Brussels, 
Belgium, 1910; three medals, International Expositions, Barcelona. 

MEMBERSHIP: American Federation of Arts; Art Alliance of 
America; American Numismatic Society. 

Works: monument, Pablo Tirull, Caja de Ahorros de Sabadell, 
Catalufia; portrait, Mila Y. Fontanals, Instituto des estudis Catalans; 
portrait, Alphonse Maseras, and sculptural group, Museum of Bar- 
celona, Spain; Salombo; Spanish Dancer. 


231 


TOO OR Res PGE hee Saves aN 


THEODORE SPICER-SIMSON was born in Havre, France, 
in 1871. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, and under 
Jean Dampt. 

Honors: highest award for medals, Brussels Exposition, 1915; 
bronze medal for medals, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, associate, Paris, 
1901; National Sculpture Society; American Numismatic Society. 

Works: marble portrait busts, Lord Selborne, Museum of Art, 
Johannesburg Art Museum, S. Africa; Henri Monad, Académie de 
Médicine, Paris; Durga Chura Law, Maharajah, Town Hall, Cal- 
cutta, India; bronze, Charles Francis Adams, Massachusetts Histori- 
cal Society, Boston, Mass.; bust of Dr. Moncure D. Conway, Dicker- 
son College, Pa., and the Author’s Club, New York. He has made 
numerous medals and portrait plaques—, George F. Watts; Sir Walter 
Lawrence; the Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha; George Meredith; 
Barrett Wendell; Admiral Sir Wilmot Fawkes. 


GALES Al Ries aE sA 


CAESAR STEA was born in Bari, Italy, in 1893. He studied 
at the National Academy of Design, Cooper Union, and the Beaux- 
Arts Institute of Design, New York.: He is a pupil of A. Stirling 
Calder, Hermon A. MacNeil, Carl A. Heber and Victor D. Salvatore. 

Honors: Beaux-Arts prize for panel for Educational Building, Pan- 
ama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 


232 


EAOSADISSE VCO WWRORR INES, IN Ba KE 


LINDSEY MorRRIS STERLING was born in Mauch-Chunk, 
Pa., in 1876. She was a pupil at Cooper Union, New York, under 
George T. Brewster; at the Art Students League, New York, under 
James Earle Fraser; also of Bourdelle and Bartlett, in Paris. 

Honors: bronze medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
San Francisco, Calif., 1915; prize, National Association of Women 
Painters and Sculptors, 1916. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Association of 
Women Painters and Sculptors; Allied Artists of America; New Haven 
Paint and Clay Club. 

Works: Blown by the Winds of Destiny; The Afternoon of a Faun. 


PAUL SWAN 


PAUL SWAN was born in Illinois. He attended the Art In- 
stitute of Chicago, studying drawing under John H. Vanderpoel and 
_ sculpture under Lorado Taft. Later he went to New York, and 
then to Paris. He exhibited two paintings at the Paris Salon, 1922, 
and a piece of sculpture called Douleur was accepted by the National 
Academy of Design, 1922. He has exhibited paintings at the Nation- 
al Academy. 


JONATHAN M. SWANSON 


JoNATHAN M. Swanson was born in Chicago, Ill., in 
1888. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago. 
MemBERSHIP: American Numismatic Society. 
Works: medals—, Quadricentennial of the Reformation, Luther 
medal; American Museum of Safety Award; portrait medals, pres- 
idents of the New York Numismatic Club; many portraits in low 


relief. 
233 


POR ATL Oe eA 


LorADO TAFT was born in Elmwood, Ill., in 1860. He 
studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris under Dumont, Bon- 
naissieux and Jules Thomas. 

Honors: designer’s medal, World’s Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 
Ill., 1893; silver medal, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 
1901; gold medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 
1904; Montgomery Ward prize, Art Institute of Chicago, 1906; 
silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 
Calif., 1915. He is Illinois State Art Commissioner; has been in- 
structor and lecturer, Chicago Art Institute since 1886; lecturer on 
art, University of Chicago. Heis the author of History of American 
Sculpture, 1903, and Modern Tendencies in Sculpture, 1921. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Academy of 
Design, academician; American Academy of Arts and Letters. 

Works: marble group, Solitude of the Soul, Metropolitan Museum 
of Art, New York; Washington monument, Seattle, Wash.; Fountain, 
Paducah, Ky.; Trotter fountain, Bloomington, I]].; Columbus memor- 
lal fountain, Washington, D. C.; Ferguson Fountain of the Great 
Lakes, Chicago, Ill.; Blackhawk, Oregon, II].; Thatcher memorial 
fountain, Denver, Colo.; Ogle Co. Soldiers memorial, Denver, Colo. ; 
Fountain of Time, Chicago, III. 


234 


FRAGMENT FROM FOUNTAIN OF TIME BY LORADO TAFT 


235 


Cr AC BCE ale Nees se) a 


GRACE HELEN TALBOT was born in North Billerica, 
Mass., in 1901. She studied under Harriet W. Frishmuth for three 
years. 

Honors: Avery prize, New York Architectural League, 1922. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Association of Women Painters and Sculp- 
tors. 

Works: Venice Invincible; Leda; The Novice; The Oracle. 


236 


Pele (De HC dee IPI De tee de 


FREDERIC E. TRIEBEL was born in Peoria, Ill., in 1865. 
He studied at the Royal Academy, Florence, Italy. 

Works: Peoria Soldiers monument, Peoria, I]].; lowa State monu- 
ment, Shiloh Battlefield, Tenn.; Mississippi State monument, Vicks- 
burg National Military Park, Vicksburg, Miss.; Mysterious Music, 
Imperial Museum, Tokio, Japan; statues, Gen. George L. Shoup, and 
Gen. Henry Rice, Statuary Hall, Washington, D. C.; marble group, 
Pidowelleawn, N. |:;-busts, Gen, John Logan, and G. A. R. Hall, 
Peoria, IIl.; bust, Lydia Bradley, Peoria, Il.; grave monument, Edwin 
B. Sheldon, Delphi, N. Y.; portrait bas-reliefs—, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin 
S. Sheldon; Roosevelt, Dante, and others. He specializes in carving 
bas-reliefs direct from the marble. 


meee O POs GhOoRGE VAGIS 


PoOLYGNOTOS G. VAGIS was born on the Island of Thasos, 
Greece, in 1894. He studied at the Beaux-Arts Institute, Greece, and 
has been a pupil of Gutzon Borglum, Leo Lentelli and John Gregory 
in America. He has exhibited at the National Academy of Design, 
1920-22, and at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia. 

Works: Greek Soldier; Universe; The Deliverer; The Defender; 
The Dreamer. 


237 


ede Hele ae BAB Ned e 


ELIHU VEDDER was born in New York in 1836, and died in 
1922. He studied in Paris with Picot, also in Italy and New York. 
From 1867 on he resided in Capri, Italy. His work was largely the 
painting of imaginative and decorative subjects. 

Honors: honorable mention, Paris Exposition, 1889; gold medal, 
Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901. 

MEMBERSHIP: American Academy of Arts and Letters; National 
Academy of Design, academician, 1865. 

Works: The Pleiades, African Sentinel, Metropolitan Museum of 
Art, New York; Minerva, mosaic and five decorative panels, Library 
of Congress, Washington, D. C.; Keeper of the Threshold, Carnegie 
Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; The Lair of the Sea Serpent, Lazarus; 
The Sphinx, and Fisherman and Djinn, Boston Museum of Fine Arts; 
Storm in Umbria, and the Fates Gathering in the Stars, Art In- 
stitute of Chicago, Chicago, II].; Fisherman and the Mermaid, Brook- 
lyn Institute Museum, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Sicilian Girl, and Landscape, 
Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R. I. 


* Deceased. 


238 


VASE BY ELIHU VEDDER 


239 


LA PETITE BY BESSIE® POTTER, VONNOH 


240 


Bio hie hi Ray ONN OH 


BESSIE POTTER VONNOH was born in St. Louis, Mo., 
in 1872. She was a student at the Art Institute of Chicago under 
Lorado Taft. 

Honors: second prize, Nashville Exposition, 1897; bronze medal, 
International Exposition, Paris, 1900; honorable mention, Pan- 
American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; gold medal, Louisiana 
Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904; silver medal, Panama- 
Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif.,1915; Elizabeth 
N. Watrous gold medal, for Allégresse, National Academy of Design, 
OKs 

MemBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Academy of 
Design, academician, 1921. 

Works: The Young Mother, and eleven statuettes, Metropolitan 
Museum, New York; Chrysanthemum Girl Reading, The Dancing 
Girl, Portrait of a Lady, An American Girl, and Girl Standing, Art 
Institute of Chicago, IIl.; Allégresse, three figures dancing, bronze, 
Detroit Institute of Art, Detroit, Mich.; Girl Dancing, Carnegie 
Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Will-o’-the-Wisp; Baby’s head; Adolescence. 
Her specialty is small groups, and she has been especially alive to the 
charms of childhood and youth and the dignity of motherhood for 
sculptural expression. She has made numerous small statuettes and 
groups expressing these ideas. 


241 


NELLIE VERNE WALKER 


NELLIE Ve WALKER was bornsin Keds@Oakslaeamarogae 

She was a pupil of Lorado Taft at the Art Institute of Chicago. 

Honors: second Grover prize, Art Institute, Chicago, 1908; 
Shaffer prize, Art Institute, Chicago, 1911. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; Chicago Society of 
Artists; Society of Western Artists; Society of Western Sculptors. 

Works: W. S. Stratton memorial, Colorado Springs, Colo.; 
portrait statue, Senator Harlan, Washington, D. C.; Her Son, ideal 
group, Art Institute, Chicago; Chief Keokuk, Keokuk, la., 1913; 
Decker Family, Battle Creek, Mich.; D. F. Diggins, Cadillac, Mich.; 
Senator Stephen, Marinette, Wis.; also portrait busts and several 
large ideal groups. 


242 


BENEDICTION, MITCHELL MEMORIAL, BY NELLIE V. WALKER 


243 


SCIENCE, LELAND STANFORD UNIVERSITY, BY EDGAR WALTER 


244 


BDGAR WALTER 


EDGAR WALTER was born in San Francisco, Calif., in 1877. 
He studied at the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art, San Francisco, 
Calif., and later studied in Paris. He was a pupil of Cormon and 
Perrin. He exhibited at the Paris Salon, 1899, and subsequently. 
Honors: honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1901; honorable mention, 
Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 
Works: Nymph and Bears; Primitive Man. 


WRU AE! RRME IB AY AM ed load ke 


WeambeRiIE WALTER was born in Baltimore, Md. She 
studied at the Maryland Institute, Baltimore, Md., and in Paris, 
France. 

Works: portrait busts—, Dr. Nicholas Sbarounis Tricorphos; 
Riccardo Bertelli; Marie Blandin; bas-reliefs—, Genevieve Lymans; 
Walter Walkinshaw; Jim the Master; statues—, Youth; Madonna 
and Child; Struggle; The Dip; Law. 


245 


ADOLPH ALEXANDER WEINMAN 


ADOLPH A. WEINMAN was born in Karlsruhe, Germany, 
in 1870. Hecame to America at the age of ten years and was later 
apprenticed to Kaldenberg, a carver in ivory and wood. During his 
apprenticeship he attended evening classes in drawing and modeling 
at Cooper Union, New York. At the age of nineteen he became the 
pupil of Philip Martiny and later studied under Saint-Gaudens at 
the Art Students League. He became assistant to Saint-Gaudens 
and later to Olin Warner, C. H. Niehaus and D. C. French. 

Honors: honorable mention, Pan-American Exposition, Buffalo, 
1901; silver medal, Louisiana Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, 1904; 
silver medal, International Exposition, Brussels, 1910; gold medal of 
honor for sculpture, New York Architectural League, 1913; J. San- 
ford Saltus Award medal for medals, American Numismatic Society, 
1920. 

MemBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, academician, 1911; 
National Institute of Arts and Letters; National Sculpture Society; 
New York Architectural League. 

WorKS: monument to Gen. Alexander Macomb, Detroit, Mich.; 
Maryland Union Soldiers and Sailors Monument, Baltimore, Md.; 
Lincoln Statue, Hodgenville, Ky.: Alexander J. Cassatt, Pennsyl- 
vania Station, New York; Lt.-Col. William F. Vilas, National 
Military Park, Vicksburg, Miss.; Lincoln statue in rotunda of State 
Capitol, Frankfort, Ky.; War Memorial, Forest Hills, N. Y.; War 
Memorial, Clark Memorial Chapel, Pomfret, Conn.; decorative 
sculpture, facade and interior, Pennsylvania Station, and on facade 
and top of tower, Municipal Building, New York; pediment sculpture 
for Senate wing, Wisconsin State Capitol, Madison, Wis.; The Rising 
Sun, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Descending Night, Kansas 
City Museum. He designed the U.S. half dollar and dime, and the | 
victory button for the U. S. Army and Navy. 


246 


NARCISSUS BY ADOLPH A. WEINMAN 


247 


JU OGAS BIR ACE Ko BeNes VV Genes) 


JuLtia BRACKEN WENDT was born at Apple River, IIl., 
in 1871. She began her art studies at the Art Institute of Chicago, 
1887, and assisted Lorado Taft in his studio, 1887-1892. She was a 
member of the Municipal Art Commission in Los Angeles, Calif., for 
three years. She is a teacher of sculpture, Otis Art Institute, Los 
Angeles. 

Honors: medal, Southern California-Panama Exposition, San 
Diego, Calif. 1015. 

MEMBERSHIP: Chicago Society of Artists; California Art Club; 
American Federation of Arts; National Arts Club, N. Y.; Three Arts 
Club, Los Angeles.§ 

Works: statue, Faith; Illinois Welcoming the Nations, State 
Capitol, Springfield, Ill.; statue, James Monroe; a series of Prophets of 
the Nineteenth Century, Morris, Emerson, Tolstoi, Lincoln, and 
others; battle monument, Missionary Ridge, Tenn.; altar-piece, The 
Tree of Life; fountain, Pan Piper; portrait busts, Mr. and Mrs. 
Leander McCormack; colossal group, Art, Science, and History, 
Museum of Exposition Park, Los Angeles; also many portrait reliefs. 


248 


MARIA P. WENIGER 


MARIA P. WENIGER was born in Bevensen, Germany, in 
1880. She studied in Munich under von Debschitz and Vierthaler 
and with Mania Cacer. 

MEMBERSHIP: Art Alliance of America. 
WoRKS: six miniature bronzes —, Dancers. 


Lee eee ace Nee VVetir ELE Re 


E. KATHLEEN WHEELER was born in Reading, Eng- 
land, in 1884. Shestudied under Esther M. Moore and Frank Calde- 
ron, and also at the Slade School in London. She exhibited at the 
Paris Salon in 1906, and at the Royal Academy in 1910. She came 
to America in 1914. 

Works: Death and Sleep; Grief; Out West. She has always 
specialized in animals, and is now engaged in making portraits in 
bronze of the leading horses of America. 


249 


GERD RED BaveAaN De eB yay cclealeINstee 


GERTRUDE VANDERBILT WHITNEY was born in New 
York City. She studied sculpture under Henry Anderson and James 
E. Fraser, and at the Art Students League, New York; she also was 
a pupil of Andrew O’Connor in Paris. 

Honors: honorable mention, Paris Salon, 1913; National Arts 
Club prize, National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors, 
1914; bronze medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San 
Francisco,. Calif,, 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; National Association 
of Women Painters and Sculptors; American Federation of Arts; 
National Arts Club. 

Works: Aztec fountain, Pan-American building, Washington, 
D. C.; El Dorado fountain, San Francisco Exposition; two panels for 
Triumphal Arch, New York City; portrait, Jo Davidson; Honorably 
Discharged; Soldiers memorial, Washington Heights, New York City. 


ALICE MORGAN WRIGHT 


ALICE MORGAN WRIGHT was born in Albany, N. Y., in 
1881. She studied at the Art Students League, New York, and under 
Gutzon Borglum and James Earle Fraser, also at the Académie 
@olarossimiaris: 

Honors: Saint-Gaudens prize, Art Students League, 1900. 

MEMBERSHIP: Society of Independent Artists; National Associa- 
tion of Women Painters and Sculptors; National Sculpture Society. 

Works: portrait, Pres. Seelye; Wood Nymph; Wind Figure; Lady 
Macbeth; portrait, Mrs. B. E. Lewis; Unto the Least of These my 
Brethren; bas-relief, Dance. 


250 


FOURTH DIVISION MEMORIAL BY GERTRUDE V. WHITNEY 


251 


STEVEDORE BY MAHONRI M. YOUNG 


252 


MAHONRI M. YOUNG 


MAHONRI M. YouwNnG was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, 
in 1877. He was a pupil of the Art Students League in New York, 
and studied at the Académies Julien, Colarossi and Delacluse, Paris. 
He is instructor at the Art Students League. 

Honors: State prizes for painting and sculpture, Utah Arts Institute, 
1900; Helen Foster Barnett prize, National Academy of Design, 1911; 
honorable mention for etching, American Art Association, Paris; 
silver medal for sculpture, Panama-Pacific Exposition, San Francisco, 
Calif., 1915. 

MeEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate; National 
Sculpture Society ; New York Architectural League; New York Water 
Color Club. 

Works: Man with Pick, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; 
Hopi and Apache group, American Museum of Natural History, New 
York; bronzes, A Laborer; The Rigger, Free Public Library, Newark, 
N. J.; Sea Gull monument, Salt Lake City, Utah; Carrying Coal; 
portrait, Alfred H. Maurer. 


253 


BRIGNOFTO Waser Mav 


BRUNO LouUIs Z1MM was born in New York in 1876. He 
studied under J. QO. A. Ward, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and Karl 
Bitter. 

Honors: first mention, collaborative competition, New York 
Architectural League, 1913; silver medal, International Exposition, 
Paris, 1900. | 

MemBErsHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Slocum memorial, and a memorial fountain, New York; 
Finnegan memorial, Houston, Texas; panels, Sergt. York and Paul 
Revere, Seaboard National Bank, New York; bust, Robert E. Lee, 
Baylor College, Belton, Texas; statue, Bird Woman, St. Louis, Mo.; 
Young memorial tablet, First National Bank, Jersey City, N. J.; 
Murdoch memorial, Wichita, Kan. 


254 


BoNeisioltk ss 
Ree iP JeaBy WOR) aby seT ble 
Olas Ne Paka hOuN 
PN, Wisbe 
I IEIGA OIL AI (OND Ua an 


SONTA BROWN 


SONIA BROWN was born in Moscow, Russia, in 1890. She 
studied in Moscow under N. Andrieff and in Paris under Emile 
Bourdelle. 


MATILDA BROWNE 


MATILDA BROWNE was born in Newark, N. J. She ex- 
hibited a painting at the National Academy of Design at the age of 
twelve. She went to Europe in 1889 and studied painting at the 
Académie Julien and with Julien Dupré and H. C. Bisbing. She 
exhibited some small sculptures of fowls and animals in 1921. 

Honors: honorable mention and prizes for painting. 

MemBeErRSHIP: American Federation of Arts; American Water 
Color Society; National Association of Women Painters and Sculp- 
tors; New York Society of Painters; Society of Animal Painters and 
Sculptors; Lyme Art Association. 


257 


PEN Roy sKReh Bill Stl 3B Re VVveN 


HENRY KIRKE BUSH-BROWN was born in Ogdensburg, 
New York, in 1857. He studied with Henry K. Brown, his uncle, 
at the National Academy of Design and with A. Mercié at the 
Académie Julien. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society; New York Architec- 
tural League; National Arts Club; Art Alliance of Philadelphia. 

WorKS: equestrian statues, Gen. G. G. Meade, Gen. Johney: 
Reynolds, Gen. John Sedgwick,—at Gettysburg, Pa.; Gen. Anthony 
Wayne at Valley Forge, Pa.; statue, Justinian, Appellate Court, 
New York; First Regiment Soldier, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mountaineer 
Soldier, Charleston, W. Va.; Lincoln memorial, Gettysburg; Chauve- 
net memorial, Annapolis, Md.; Cyrus Clark memorial, Riverside 
Drive, New York City; bust of Henry K. Brown, Hall of Fame, New 
York University, Fordham, New York. 


NESS AP @ OUF EEN 


NeEssA COHEN was born in New York City. She was a 
pupil of James Earle Fraser, and studied at Cooper Union and the 
Art Students League. 

MempBersuIP: National Association of Women Painters and Sculp- 
tors; New York Architectural League; Society of Independent 
Artists. 

Works: Sunrise, Havana, Cuba; Navajo Watching Women at 
Work; group of Indians of Southwestern United States, American 
Museum of Natural History. 


258 


BOR CONNMMO® tome Teme eae @. 


Pee ONTO Dat lit ep Oe was. born in) Bivona, |taly,: in 
1900. He studied at the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, New York. 
MEMBERSHIP: Italian American Art Association. 
Works: bronze head, Dr. J. H. Goldberger; bronze bust, Italian 
Boy; Portrait of an Old Man; Portrait of Mrs. Hister; bronze bust, 
Abraham Lincoln. 


PAIGE debe eyAlna 


PAUL HERZEL was born in Tillowitz, Silesia, Germany, in 
1876. He was a pupil of the St. Louis School of Fine Arts and the 
Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, New York. 

Honors: Mrs. H. P. Whitney prize, 1915; Helen Foster Barnett 
prize, National Academy of Design, 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Py or«s, | he Struggle; The Chant. 


PTAA TIPE Stale TAPS ye 


PHILIP MARTINY was born in Alsace in 1858. He was a 
pupil of Eugéne Dock in France and of Augustus Saint-Gaudens in 
the United States. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Academy of Design, associate; New York 
Architectural League; National Arts Club. 

Works: doors for St. Bartholomew’s Church, New York; Mc- 
Kinley monument, Springfield, Mass.; Soldiers and Sailors monument, 
Jersey City, N. J.; statue, ex-Vice-Pres. Garret A. Hobart, Paterson, 
N. J.; sculpture in Hall of Records, New York City; two groups, 
Chamber of Commerce, New York City; group of Allies, Flatiron 
Building, New York City. 


259 


PIETRO MONTANA 


PrETRO MONTANA was born in Italy in 1890. He studied 
at Cooper Union and the Mechanics Institute. 

MEMBERSHIP: Italian American Art Association. 

Works: War memorial, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Ridgewood War mem- 
orial, Brooklyn, N. Y.; East New York War memorial, Brooklyn, 
N. Y.; monument to B. T. Weylnecht, City Cemetery, Alliance, 
Ohio. 


EUGENE MORAHAN 


EUGENE MORAHAN was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1869. 
He studied under Augustus Saint-Gaudens and at the Art Students 
League, New York. 

MEMBERSHIP: National Sculpture Society. 

Works: Alfred G. Vanderbilt memorial fountain, Newport, R. I.; 
Elks memorial, Buffalo, N. Y.; Soldiers and Sailors memorial, Brook- 
lyn, N. Y.; Cuddy memorial, St. Barnabas Church, Buxhill, Sussex, 
England. 


260 


Vesey Os lelves Mil TE 


May Mortt-SMITH was born in Honolulu, T. H., in 1879. 
She was a pupil of the Académie Colarossi, of Van der Weyden, 
T. Spicer-Simson and Robert I. Aitken. 

Honors: bronze medal, Panama-California Exposition, San Diego, 
Calif., 1915; silver medal, Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 
San Francisco, Calif., 1915. 

MEMBERSHIP: Sculptors Guild of California; California Art Club. 

Works: portrait medals of Galli-Curci, Isadora Duncan, Blasco 
Ibanez, etc.; Charles H. Barker award medal. 


SAMUEL MURRAY 


SAMUEL MURRAY was born in Philadelphia, in 1870. He 
was a pupil of Thomas Eakins. He exhibited at the Paris Salon in 
1900. 

Honors: gold medal, Art Club of Philadelphia, 1894; honorable 
mention, Art Club of Philadelphia, 1897; honorable mention, Pan- 
American Exposition, Buffalo, N. Y., 1901; silver medal, Louisiana 
Purchase Exposition, St. Louis, Mo., 1904. 

Works: Prophets, Witherspoon Building, Philadelphia, Pa.; 
statues,—Commodore Barry, and Dr. Joseph Leidy, Philadelphia, Pa.; 
busts,—Admiral George V. Melville, and Archbishop Ryan; Penn- 
sylvania State battlefield monument, Gettysburg, Pa.; statue, Father 
Corby, Notre Dame University, Notre Dame, Ind.; J. H. Windrin 
portrait, Smith memorial, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pa. 


POSE Ril aN Gays 


JoseEPpH NICOLOSI! was born in Italy in 1893. He studied 
at the Beaux-Arts Institute of Design, 1915-1919, and with the late 
Solon H. Borglum, 1916-1918. He was admitted to the preliminary 
competition for the Prix de Rome in 1920. 

Honors: many medals and honorable mentions. 
Works: Frederick Thompson memorial, 1921. 


ADAM PIETZ 


ADAM P1£Tz was born in Offenbach, Germany, in 1873. He 
studied in Germany and at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, 
Philadelphia, and the Chicago Art Institute. 

MEMBERSHIP: Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts; American 
Numismatic Society. 

Works: Stephen Decatur, Philadelphia Navy Yard; Thomas P. 
Anshutz, Philadelphia Sketch Club; portraits and medals, Vander- 
pool Art Association, Chicago, IIl.; Smithsonian Institution, Washing- 
ton, D. C.; British Museum; Chicago Art Institute. 


262 


OSPINDE TE TEie) INGA CMe IEG Sy SER ORG IOI 


ANNETTE MARCELLUS SLOCUM was born in Cleveland, 
Ohio. She studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and 
with Edward Lanteri, and also at the Royal College of Arts, London, 
England. Her specialty is portraiture. 


Rey Baal Gee Kol AUN 


Moree RT GC. WAKEMAN was born in Norwalk, Conn., in 
1889. He studied at the Yale School of Fine Arts. 
Works: Portrait of Dr. Lively. 


263 


WIRES DAA Leek ING) 


PLAQUES 


CHOATE BY HERBERT ADAMS 


JOSEPH H 


266 


venepterene . 
Tait, eae aco 


PEGGY GANTT BY HERBERT ADAMS 


267 


VISIT OF MARSHAL FOCH TO THE UNITED STATES 
BY ROBERT I. AITKEN 


268 


WATROUS MEDAL FOR SCULPTURE 
BY ROBERT I. AITKEN 


CHILDREN’S YEAR BY CHESTER BEACH 


SGHOOL/ ART LEAGUE BY CHESTER] BEACH 


270 


PEACE OF VERSAILLES BY CHESTER BEACH 


271 


JACK LAMBDIN 


BY EDWARD 


2 


BERGE 


WILLIAM B. GRAVES BY EDWARD BERGE 


273 


BRENNER 


ICTOR D. 


, 
] 


PBACE BY \ 


I 
| 


BRENNER 


JOHN HAY BY VICTOR D 


275 


FREDERICK W. MACMONNIES BY MABEL CONKLING 


DALLIN 


HOMAGE TO MARSHAL FOCH BY CYRUS E 


277 


U. S. ARMY INSIGNIA U. S. ARMY INSIGNIA 
BY A. DEFRANCISCI BY A. DEFRANCISCI 


YACHT CLUB, BRITISH-AMERICAN CUP 
BY ANTHONY DEFRANCISCI 


278 


U. S. SILVER DOLLAR BY ANTHONY DEFRANCISCI 


AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF MINING ENGINEERS 
BY ANTHONY DE FRANCISCI 


279 


Si? LOUIS ART LEAGUESBY WLRIG LH) ELEBREUSEN 


WAR SERVICE 


RG 


PENNSYLVANIA R. 


BY ULRIG HH: BLLERHUSEN 


280 


MEDAL WITH ENAMELED WINGS 
BY ULRIC H. ELLERHUSEN 


281 


PEORIA SOCIETY OF ALLIED ARTS 
BY SPAULS EJ ELDE 


282 


SERVICE MEN OF GLENCOE, ILL. 


3 


BY PAUL FJELDE 
28 


TO THE CITY OF VERDUN FROM THE PEOPLE 
OF THE UNITED STATES BY JOHN FLANAGAN 


284 


CARTE YAR DES DINE bola B Ye [OLN SEL ANAGAN 


MASS. 


, 


WAR SERVICE MEDAL OF MARION 


5 


28 


WILLIAMS COLLEGE WAR SERVICE, OBV. 
BY? JAMESS EB. ERASER: 


U. S. NAVY DISTINGUISHED SERVICE 
BY JAMES E. PRASER 


226 


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AMERICAN COMMITTEE FOR THE DEVASTATED 
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287 


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288 


3 


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289 


VISIT TO NEW YORK OF FRENCH AND BRITISH 
WAR COMMISSIONS BY DANIEL C. FRENCH 


COMPLETION OF THE CATSKILL AQUEDUCT 
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291 


ROBERT 


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HUNT—OBV. BY EMIL FUCHS 


202 


a oe 


eT ee Se oe 


eh | at 
7 


* 


REV. BY EMIL FUCHS 


HUNT 


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293 


‘ F 
CAROLYN AND PATRICIA CLEMENT | 
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204 


; HAROLD TRIPP CLEMENT 
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295 


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296 


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297 


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298 


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299 


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300 


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301 


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303 


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304 


ST. PAUL INSTITUTE BY PAUL MANSHIP 


ART WAR RELIEF BY PAUL MANSHIP 


305 


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306 


CARDINAL GIBBONS BY J. MAXWELL MILLER 


307 


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PENTON MEDAL, CLEVELAND ART ASSOCIATION 
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sy et ERO re ee A A BY: See Se ee 


3 Y 

Ls a hat ee ; : 32 me 

ys A» , a . ww iX te SOO tee LN 
2s 


J. OTTO SCHWEIZER, SCULPTOR PHILA. : COPYRIGHT 1914 


SWISS RELIEF FUND MEMORIAL 
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313 


KATHERINE GABAUDAN 
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314 


7 


CENTENARY OF THE BATTLE OF PLATTSBURGH 


BY JONATHAN M. SWANSON 


\ 


315 


ORDER OF THE SONS») OF ITALY 
BY) bh. .beel RL EB Eile - 


316 


JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY 
BY LORADO TAFT 


317 


MT. SINAI COMMEMORATIVE WAR MEDAL BY A. A. WEINMAN 


U. S. HONORABLE 
DISCHARGE 
BY 
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THEODORE N. VAIL AWARD BY A. A. WEINMAN 


318 


J. SANFORD SALTUS AWARD FOR MEDALLIC ART, 
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BY A. A. WEINMAN 


319 


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ear elas 


Be ONAC ges ane Bea ler 


LOUISSBOURGEOIS 
MARBLE BUST 


app eb cata CARVES 


PRIMAVERA TREE DAINCT: 
BUST IN COLORED MARBLE BRONZE GROUP 
MARIANNINA me NORD IG EyY PE* 
BUST COLORED GILDED BRONZE HEAD 
MRS. BILLINGS BEGG Ye GANTT 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF COLORED PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 
WILSON MEMORIAL, FRAGMENT JOSEPH H. CHOATE 
COLORED PLASTER BAS-RELIEF UNION LEAGUE CLUB 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 
NYMPH 


FOUNTAIN FIGURE, COLORED PLASTER 


PoC) Delehel mle Aol ph rON 


GEN. JOHN J. PERSHING JOAN OF ARC 
PLASTER BUST EQUESTRIAN STATUETTE PLASTER 
COMRADES IN ARMS* DOUGHBOY 
WAR MEMORIAL, ALPHA DELTA PHI QUARTER SIZE MODEL FOR SOLDIERS 
BRONZE STATUETTE GROUP MEMORIAL, BRONZED PLASTER FIGURE 
OUTEKSDARKNESS THE FIND, FOUNTAIN GROUP 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF FOUNTAIN GROUP, COLORED PLASTER 
Bes bee DETAIL LIGHT 
CAMP MERRITT MEMORIAL, GRANITE PLASTER MODEL FOR GENERAL ELEC- 
RELIEF TRIC COMPANY 


(HRB EsPORTRAME BUSS 
COLORED PLASTER 


SIM be deny Neh dN 


THE CHARGING HERD THE WOUNDED COMRADE* 
SMALL BRONZE GROUP OF ELEPHANTS SMALL BRONZE GROUP OF ELEPHANTS 
JECOMBM Poirier au ile TIN) 
MASK PAUL ‘CHILD 
COLORED PLASTER BRONZE HEAD 


*THE ASTERISK FOLLOWING THE NAME OF A SUBJECT INDICATES THAT SUCH SUBJECT IS ILLUSTRATED 


323 


DIS TOF SCAU PY ORS (AN DHE Ree, Xt Bats 


EaVin el OarA SN iG Es took, 


GOOSE, BOY* GOOSE GIRL 
BRONZE GARDEN GROUP BRONZE GARDEN GROUP 


BARKING SEAL 
PLASTER 


VS ARIS sD certs La 


MOTHER AND «GHD YOUNG SATYR 
PLASTER GROUP BRONZE HEAD 


ASTE BSE ltehicee a Dea lent 


Die a rls AG BEAGE 
BRONZE FIGURE BRONZE STATUETTE 

FIFTH STATION OF THE CROSS — TENTH STATION OF Tiers 
BRONZE ON WOOD BRONZE ON WOOD 


PORTRAIT -RELIEF 
BRONZE 


SIS eAgN Be bake 


PORPRALTCORSAg NE GRO 
BRONZE BUST 


ROB Beale: eb oe eralG 


PEAGE 
PLASTER STATUE 


GEORG EAGER Eo BARING ta 


LINCOLN THE MARTYR LINCOEN HEADS 
MARBLE HEAD MARBLE 

GINCOENSETEAEROD ied RISING WOMAN 
PLASTER HEAD PLASTER STATUE 


PRODIGAL SON 
MARBLE GROUP 


CWE MSE N <3] 2B Asa sra 


MADONNA* PORTRAIT 
PLASTER REPLICA OF ORIGINAL IN ST. BRONZE MEDALLION 
MARY'S CATHEDRAL, COVINGTON, KEN- 
TUCKY. 
BOY AND DOLPHIN 
COLORED PLASTER 


324 


Moen Oo Gila PslOUR-o fA N De DHE DLR ( XSHLBITS 


ee etemnVome oe Wee flees [le 


RODER PeMGR hiss 
PLASTER STATUE 


maArAY ETTE 
BRONZE BUST 


LOUIS AGASSIZ PEI LOSOP TY 


PLASTER STATUE BRONZE BUST 


DECORATIVE HORSES BRAZILIAN FROG 
BRONZE BRONZE 


ADAM SCULPIN 
BRONZE STATUETTE BRONZE FISH 


MICHELANGELO 
BRONZED PLASTER HEAD 


Cishe i (Weak Te wes! 


ies LEAPING SPRAY 
COLORED PLASTER GROUP 


POI KAT BUST 
PLASTER 


DHE iNG ORs HE SEA* 
COLORED PLASTER FIGURE 


NANETTE 
TERRA-COTTA BUST 


THREESIVORLES 
A WHITE PIGEON AN ECHO OF GREECE 


Bie ee BES INEN Ele) 


PAIR OF SEA-HORSE ANDIRONS 
BRONZE 


DBO ID stn let Ga o 


WOODWIND 
BRONZE STATUE 


IN eee oatene KEAN 


ANTIQUE DANCE 
BRONZE GROUP 


Save we) Rees Dbaleare lal 


NUDE FIGURE 


Same RCL LN* 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


PROKSO* DECORATIVE HEAD 
COLORED PLASTER FIGURINE PLASTER 
VIOLET MAIDENHOOD 


SMALL BRONZE 


BIRD FOUNTAIN 
PLASTER 


MRS. S. 
MARBLE BAS-RELIEF 


MARBLE STATUETTE 


GARDEN FIGURE 
COLORED PLASTER 


TWO BRONZE FIGURINES 


325 


EU Sihe O'FatS CeUnis PaO LR. Se eAGN: Diet ei Been bec hieig bela les 


GUE ZONA OR GIA 


THEODORE ROOSEVELT EARTH 
BRONZED PLASTER HEAD BRONZE STATUETTE 
SOB OIN Tee Ouray ay iy: 
NAPOLEON ROUGH RIDEK* 
MARBLE EQUESTRIAN GROUP BRONZE EQUESTRIAN GROUP 
ONE IN A THOUSAND WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE 
BRONZE EQUESTRIAN GROUP PLASTER GROUP 
JiOrs Hable sO) Wee 
AN EARLY BREAKFAST THE PRAIRIE GEIRE 
ANIMAL GROUP, COLORED PLASTER ANIMAL GROUP, BRONZE 
Vel Cel ORS Bs he Pees Ee. 
ELIZABETH 


BRONZE BUST 


Ol eye Vie Rel OO aeB haliNGE) aoa 


RABBIT KER S PAS TINE 
COLORED PLASTER MARBLE CAT 
MACDOUGAL 


DOG'S HEAD IN MARBLE 


SONIA BROWN 


BAS-RELIEF 
STONE 


M Asis .D ANDi Oi Nee 


ABahe Ter Uke 
SMALL BRONZE 


HENRY KIRKE. BUSH=B KGiwey 
WASHINGTON AT NEWBURGH INFANT CONVERSATION 


HEROIC BUST, PATINED PLASTER MARBLE BUST 
HENRY K. BROWN VISCOUNT JAMES BRYCE 
COLORED PLASTER BUST BRONZE BUST 


Eos O'ReES GAD IOs 


THE DANCE WITH TAMBOURINE RESIGNATION 
BRONZE STATUETTE BRONZE STATUETTE 


{DECEASED 


326 


Paoteo een ret Oo ANN De lio LR EXHIBITS 


RemeooimerelebiIN Ga Gael) ER 


Rabe LAST DRYAD Peo cA MOTTE 
COLORED PLASTER STATUE PLASTER GROUP 
DANCING NAIAD SCRA INGER eH PEL 
COLORED PLASTER STATUE BRONZE STATUETTE 


TES CELE DEARSW ELH STHE =PINY BLACK SWAN* 
COLORED PLASTER FIGURE 


Deer N ee Crear Vier aAG iN 


HOOP BOWLER JEANNE 
COLORED PLASTER STATUETTE COLORED PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


BLUE DANCER 
COLORED PLASTER STATUETTE 


BUESE YNING KOE TRS 
MME. AMELITA GALLI-CURCI* ITALIAN TONES 


MARBLE BUST PLASTER MASQUE IN POLYCHROME 
NYMPH SAC Fe 
BRONZE STATUE BRONZE STATUE 


NESSA COHEN 
MOMENT MUSICALE 
SMALL BRONZE 
VMEATB Eile © ON: KIS INIG 


TEMPTATION THEE LO LES GI RE 
BRONZE FIGURE BRONZED PLASTER STATUE 


BeAr © INKS ING: 
NATHANIEL W. CONKLING, D. D. 
BRONZE BUST 
BIE Use Clee ibyel CON OM er ledie 
THE ELEPHANT GCHIEDS 
SMALL BRONZE 
GAs 3 EP aR aViE Ns Nee One Eee lait 


FOUNTAIN FIGURE 
SMALL BRONZE 


327 


EIST ORS GUL PL ORS CAND ab FE Ree or tte be 


EDAD OS oT TGrAN 


MARKETING* 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


LATOR Weed DS 101 Coe sy ke He 


THE SO One Ei EE- 
BRONZE AND GRANITE FOUNTAIN FIGURE 


Ht HeN RA GRA BNL he 


BOY AND TURTLE GIRL AND BUTTERFLY 
BRONZE FOUNTAIN FIGURE BRONZE FIGURE 


MUA-R,G- AK Evin EoRe EN Gell aGe es 


GIRE WIE THE CURDS: 
MARBLE HEAD 


CGAY KAU Sav ark) soley sala 


THE EAST ARKOW= 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


JO DAVIDSON 


“UNCLE JOE-CANNON JACQUES, THE ARTISi Ses 
BRONZE HEAD MARBLE HEAD 

JAPANESE, GIRL PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST'S WIFE 
BRONZE FIGURE MARBLE HEAD 


RUSSIAN DANCE 
SMALL BRONZE 


AN THON Ye DIERKS AgN Gees 


AN ITALIAN FRAGMENT THE DAWNING HOUR* 
MARBLE HEAD GILDED PLASTER STATUE 

HENRY HULL IN. “THE MAN THERESA 

WHO CAME BACK” PLASTER PORTRAIT-RELIEF 


BRONZE STATUETTE, LOANED BY MR. 
AROS & 


CARMELA CHIOSTERGICAFAT Tigi 
PLASTER MEDALLION 


G i EBD ER CalsleNiSaiey 


ICARUS 
COLORED PLASTER FIGURE 


328 


Posie) tess Celie rale io AON De hVHETR? EXHIBITS 


BMG ST TE BOTT S TD Sa Ccg Ge a 


SPANISH HORSEMAN HORSE GROUP, FOUNTAIN 
BRONZE SKETCH 
SMALL BRONZE 
MIGHT AND RIGHT 
SMALL BRONZE GAT Ss 
SMALL BRONZE GROUP 
POLO 
BRONZE GROUP BUELL FIGHTERS 1 


SMALL BRONZE 
BDULESFIGHTER, 2 
SMALL BRONZE 


Oa eOaNet Oso by IAP P.O 


ITALIAN BOY 
BRONZE BUST 


Gres ee Pe ON ACT O 


Paw Orr. OF THE FORESI* DANGELOF ETERNAL SPRING 
PLASTER REPLICA OF MARBLE FIGURE, PLASTER REPLICA OF GROUP, CITY 
CITY PARK, HARRISBURG, PA. PARK, HARRISBURG, PA. 


(Ot Neri e CON VERSE 
BRONZE HEAD 


OD hue G EB roR BARD 


SOV BRE 
BRONZED PLASTER STATUETTE 


ee som aba Nelvana les Hob. Rael b 


tHe PERMAGANT LA ESSEAV E 

BRONZE STATUETTE MARBLE STATUETTE 
BeaNG DOLLS RAG TIME 

SMALL BRONZE BRONZE STATUETTE 
Pie LORENCE 5S. WYETH AW ETS MOG LieaM COM ebiite 

MARBLE RELIEF BRONZE STATUETTE 


TEs hh wel. 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


CET Ral Gaile bel aerl ESS bay 


ARTEMIS* CONFUCIUS 
PLASTER PANEL FOR GATEWAY PLASTER BUST 


“ VTHESNANGY = Oi vitee GROS5 
BRONZED PLASTER FIGURE 


329 


LIS O28 se CU Pry On SSA N Data he Bere Db letes 


POUUNe bale als 


CHIEF ORATAM 
BRONZED PLASTER BUST 


ROMO EL itaele de MOINES) 


BOY ANDEPAN THER® THE KIERNAN MEMORIAL 
BRONZE GROUP LOANED BY MR. FRANK PLASTER REPLICA OF BRONZE ORIGINAL 
VANDERLIP 


Le OrW eS aay aes be 


MARY BALLARD ITALIAN BOY 
BRONZE BAS-RELIEF BRONZE HEAD 

DU DLEX]EERKINS MORNING 
BRONZE STATUETTE PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


SALLY AEE SEAL KEN ERAS) 
THE ENDOFSTHESDAY 
COLORED PLASTER STATUETTE 
BE Ale Rel Gobet be EyNe ll OaN 


A SEA-WEED FOUNTAIN* 
PLASTER REPLICA OF FOUNTAIN, FAIRMOUNT PARK, PHILADELPHIA, PA. 


PAUL FJELDE 
MRS. OLIVE JOHNSON VEA FIGHTER 
PLASTER REPLICA OF BRONZE RELIEF COLORED PLASTER HEAD 
SALVA TORUE Seine 
QUEEN OF ATLANTIS* THE TRIBUTE 
BRONZE STATUETTE POLYCHROME BRONZE RELIEF 
JAMES E. FRASER 


ALEXANDER HAMILTON* 
HEROIC FIGURE, PLASTER 


ERICSSON JUNE EVANS 

HEROIC HEAD, PLASTER MARBLE BUST 
MR. FORD CHARLES DANA GIBSON 

TERRA-COTTA HEAD COLORED PLASTER BUST 
MR. CHASE ROBERT BACON 

TERRA-COTTA HEAD MARBLE HEAD 

HEAD? OF TAY PAUN 
BRONZE 


330 


uci tO) Pee GUase hes FAWN DOT HE TR EXHIBITS 


Loe Rese aCe SI IB ON TE ea We mins 


BABY GOAT* GILBERT STUART 
BRONZE PLASTER BUST, REPLICA OF ORIGINAL 
HALL OF FAME, N. Y. UNIVERSITY. 
SNUFF 
BRONZE PUP YOUNG PORKER 
BRONZE 
NYMPH AND SATYR 
COLORED PLASTER GROUP 
DP NICE ICE REN C.H 
LINCOLN MEMORIAL Sel eOrs LIE ES 
PLASTER REPLICA OF STATUE, LIN- BRONZE STATUE, SPENCER TRASK ME- 
COLN, NEBRASKA. MORIAL, SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y. 
DU PONT FOUNTAIN, WASHING- 
LON D7 GC. MEMORY 
SCALE MODEL PLASTER STATUE, REPLICA OF MARBLE 
METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, N. Y. 
THE MARSEILLAISE 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 
BE Ose AN DE R 
MOTHER AND INFANT HER- POTENTIAL AMERICA 
CULnES* EQUESTRIAN FIGURE 


SMALL BRONZE GROUP 


DKhEI CH, FROM THE LAND OF 
iEaEny GER BORBANS 
PLASTER EQUESTRIAN FIGURE 


Piece eV etoile evint: [rl 


PHE HUNT Lib oVINE= 

BRONZE GROUP PLASTER FIGURE 
GLOBE SUN-DIAL PANTASIE 

BRONZE FIGURE SMALL BRONZE 
NYMPH AND SATYR VE Peb UB Bers 

SMALL BRONZE PLASTER STATUETTE 


AGNES V. FROMEN 


THE ARROWS FLIGHT 
BRONZED PLASTER STATUE 


331 


LS pO? -S CUe Prl.O RiS 9A N) DoE Pk BAX obra ete 


Sublease hoy eeteahs oi. 


FORTUNA* 
COLORED PLASTER FOUNTAIN FIGURE 


MOR be PERC leks 


PORTRALT BUST OF ASLADY MAIDEN MEDITATION* 
COLORED PLASTER MARBLE FIGURE 


PORTRAIT HALF-FIGURE OF AN MOTHER AND CHILD 
ARTIST MARBLE BAS-RELIEF 
PATINED BRONZE 


THE CALCLIFROMs THE SBEYOND 
COLORED PLASTER FIGURE 


GEORGE E. GANIERE 
INNOCENCE 
PLASTER STATUE 
TOFEAVNGN Eee Cra bal esha 


UE Cis Pee ARGH EG 
PLASTER GROUP 


CEL CARRE? Fame Cralne x eel ey, 


CHILDE HASSAM PAUL W. BARTLETT 
BRONZE BUST BRONZE HEAD 


STUDY OF HEAD FOR FIGURE OF WAKS 
GEN. MEADE MEMORIAL, WASHINGTON, D. C., PLASTER 


‘| COPPUING GiRSEEG Oia 
TOY VENUS* PHILOMELA 
PLASTER STATUE FOR FOUNTAIN-POOL PLASTER 
FRA NG E Se G RegVisEeS 


LOUIS HENRY DOW* WILLIAM BARNES, M. D. 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


MASTER HAROLD CLEMENT 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


KARE eH e) GiRsUieiia 


GOOSEGIKE 
PLASTER STATUETTE 


332 


Pics l Aha iC UP LOmise AN DeTHETREX HIB ES 


Paras ay ee CU INEZeB LRG 


THE BRIDE OF THE MAN-HORSE 
BRONZE GROUP 


Ree rave bmeLien Vin Vie ke 


BUST OF A WOMAN* HAWK 
LIMESTONE BLUESTONE 

HEAD OF AN OLD MAN PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN 
COLORED PLASTER MARBLE BUST 


WEARER EARN OVC 


SEA-WEED, FOUNTAIN 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


LIL Veh awin Wy le Ve 


YOUNG GORILLA, DINAH* GREYHOUND—STUDY 
BRONZED PLASTER BRONZE 


EIONSENTERING THESARENA 
PLASTER 


Peeinepv pe eeu UG Pee AS Web LS 


SUN-DIAL DUCK BABY, FOUNTAIN SKETCH 
UNGLAZED ROCKWOOD BRONZED PLASTER 


Rese Eee vi bea Wak S 


SU ee 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


Gy Nal ileee se Lieb aR 


PASTORAL BONDAGE 
PLASTER STATUE PLASTER GROUP 


Eee ole wa aoe EER elaN G 


MARGARET GRAY EVANS BAPTISMAL FONT* 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF COLORED PLASTER 


THE PARIS ti Sa VO Leh CHS PAUBOTeWARD 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


IDI URC VO Dah aided e IN: 


ROGERePLAT I* STARR FOUNTAIN 
COLORED PLASTER BUST COLORED PLASTER 


933 


Liborl OH 7S: C USL PrrnORiSs ACN Did PR ie serial leas 


HENRY SHER UN-GeConTINUED 


RU SSaWEy TEE ENERGY IN REPOSE 
COLORED PLASTER HEAD PLASTER GROUP 
JAMES McINTOSH CRAIG DIANA 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF HEROIC MARBLE HEAD 


FOUR PANELS, CIVIL WAR MEMORIAL, YALE UNIVERSITY 
COLORED PLASTER 


Pop Cpe aba’ 


THE TOAD—LIONESS AND CUBS 
BRONZED PLASTER GROUP 


PRED ERICK CH bhiB ARES 


THE MOULDER 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


GI AG EES Se seiisleN Gd aN 


ATLANTA DECORATIVE FIGURE, FOR 
BRONZE FIGURE FOUNTAIN* 

DECORATIVE FIGURE rns 
TINTED PLASTER THE SKYLARK 

VENUS ON SHELL PLASTER STATUETTE 
BRONZE STATUETTE PSYCHE 

VANITY PLASTER FIGURE 


BRONZE STATUETTE PANDORA 
PLASTER JEWEL-CASE 


TYING THE SANDAL 
BRONZE FIGURE 


MALVINA HOFFMAN 


OFFRANDE* GEN. SIR DAVID HENDERSON 
BRONZE GROUP PLASTER BUST 

RICHARD HOFFMAN BACCHANALE RUSSE 
MARBLE BUST BRONZE GROUP 


BOY AND PANTHER CUB 
BRONZE GROUP FOR FOUNTAIN 
WRG TES si Ve ON Sil 


LEIF ERICSSON—SKETCH HARLAN FRAZER 
BRONZED PLASTER STATUETTE BRONZED PLASTER BUST 


THESSPIRUIAOFSLRANGES 
BRONZED PLASTER STATUE 


334 


ToltopUeO ero laren om AN Deel i PR EXHIBITS 


pr eee) Pee Be LOW ATK) 


THE BATHER DANCES 
MARBLE FULL-RELIEF BRONZE FIGURE 


MOTHER AND CHILD 
GROUP IN STONE, LOANED BY MRS. H. P. WHITNEY 


rele OO Wve AON E> 


DAMEDZPEGASUS# 
BRONZE FOUNTAIN GROUP 


CALA ENE: JBME SAIS ONDE, Ihde CON Es & 


itt KONZE BOY NIRVANA 
BRONZE STATUE MARBLE FIGURE 


eoiNo Ne Vee ley Aa, 


JOAN OF ARC* 
PLASTER REPLICA OF FULL~RELIEF, CATHEDRAL OF ST. JOHN THE DIVINE, NEW YORK 


SIX BRONZES 


MICHEL M. JACOBS 


ROGK OF ALE NATIONS 
BRONZE BABY HEAD 


bie I IE ee Gal IES 
AMERICA UNFURLING THE FLAG SUN-DIAL* 


PLASTER EQUESTRIAN FIGURE BRONZE 
F. LYNN JENKINS 
DIANA* DAPHNE 
BRONZE STATUETTE BRONZE STATUETTE 
CrOonRGE }. GOULD PEACESIN EXILE 
BRONZE BUST, LOANED BY MR. KING- BRONZE HEAD 
DON GOULD 


(eet eee) SE Ve TaN 


er eAN 1D GAZELLE* COMEDY 
BRONZE GROUP BRONZE STATUETTE 


NYMPH AND FAWN 
BRONZE GROUP FROM DARLINGTON MEMORIAL FOUNTAIN 


VISAS Uae ome severely 1: 


THE YOUNG SUN-WORSHIPPER 
GARDEN OR FOUNTAIN FIGURE, COLORED PLASTER 


335 


Lis sf - OFS: CiUcL3P 120 Rasa AND eels Eee eA re see 


Cee Views | Out sao CaN 
BISON BULLABOUT TOLIE DOWN ELEPHANT* 


PLASTER FIGURE PLASTER CARVING 
MIGHTY = OFFRINGLINGS BROS eZ BU RCI: 
PLASTER ELEPHANT PLASTER CARVING 
TAEZAWN EUS Zak © 
DANCERS BOY WITH GOAT 
BRONZE GROUP COLORED PLASTER GROUP 


ESR INGE Sela elssteae ig) portale 


ORIENTA, FOUNTAIN FIGURE* 
COLORED PLASTER 


LS sO aE Kee Nala 


PART OF FOUNTAIN* SKETCH FOR CROSS, WOODLAWN 
HIGH RELIEF, PLASTER CEMEVERY sNeaye 
PLASTER REPLICA OF MARBLE ORIGI- 
WILL-O-THE-WISP NAL 


SMALL BRONZE 
DYING MELODIES 


FIGURE FOR MEMORIAL BRONZE GROUP 

PLASTER MODEL 

FOUNTAIN FIGURE 

THREE FIGURES, MODEL FOR COLORED PLASTER 
FOUNTAIN 

AUDUBON PARK, NEW ORLEANS, COL- 

ORED WAX 

MACRO 852k © Ribs 

ADOLESCENCE* -« NIGHT 

PLASTER STATUE BRONZE SEATED FIGURE 

ANNA? COJISE M AWwWNG ISAs 7D 
A ROMAN LADY 
BRONZE HEAD 
PSYCHE 
BRONZE FOUNTAIN FIGURE 
AUG BIE Ral SIA ASE sso 

Billley FIRST (EEFOR I 

BRONZE GOAT SMALL BRONZE 
PENGUINS* FROG AND KATYDID 

BRONZE GROUP SMALL BRONZE 


CHANTICLEER 
BRONZE COCK 


336 


louie > CUNT Pal OR SseA ND ELH ETRE XHUBITS 


Cale ae) Lee ere AY ELL KI OUP 


pie GH OF A KID NANGY LEE* 
PLASTER PLASTER CALF 


eae le Waele ee 


BRONZE ORAN TIE 
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, WASHINGTON, D. C. 


|tel Shey Tyee HOP a EE Oye 


DAPHNE BELGIUM, 1914 
SMALL BRONZE BRONZED PLASTER GROUP 
GALATEA 


SMALL BRONZE 


AUC TUS AIU I tea e 


DAWN GREAT FORTUNE 
BRONZE STATUE PLASTER STATUE 
TORSO PARISIENNE* 
CEMENT 
IRE O@IereNel shes le] 
FRAG POLE BASE TorepATHERS 
FOUR PLASTER PANELS COLORED PLASTER FIGURE 
TWO DECORATIVE PANELS WATER SPRITE 
PLASTER PLASTER 
AGE ae Eh) ee lea IN YZ, 
hit ELUSIVE WITCH DESHA* 
BRONZE FIGURINE SMALL BRONZE 
LAWN TENNIS TROPHY 
SMALL BRONZE 
GeO R Gi | eer rea. 
FRANK BACON SNAKE CHARMER 
BRONZED PLASTER BUST BRONZE STATUETTE 
AMO EVE? 
PLASTER SEATED FIGURE COLORED PLASTER STATUETTE 
“MATCHESEN” FRANK BACON 
COLORED PLASTER BUST | PLASTER. BAS-RELIEF 


2H) 


Lu Sor O Bais Cull: PAO RIS) AUNAD eerie) Ke eel Dae a 


FeVe Te YSN al ON aig AGN 
PORTRAIT OF Na HBA TLCHEED ERB ELIZABE TH 


BRONZE HEAD MARBLE BUST 
PORTRAIT OF HORTON JUNIOR BEYOND 
MARBLE MEDALLION BRONZE STATUE 


NATURES GON FEMPEATING THE SOURCE OR Iihe 
HEROIC PLASTER FIGURE 


ACR Us Rae el OLR EB INEZ Aa Nal 


FOUNTAINS OR THEsGCOLDENZAGE= 
COLORED PLASTER 


AUC Ter Seni US EaViaN 


FRANCIS ASBURY= ISABEL HAUSER 
PLASTER REPLICA OF EQUESTRIAN PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 
STATUE, WASHINGTON, D. C. 


GEN. DAVID McM. GREGG 
PLASTER EQUESTRIAN FIGURE 


F RE D BRL G Ke Woevies covyiOuNeN TEE 


VENUS AND ADONIS* 
GROUP IN COLORED MARBLE 


CUATRO aD mV race NSE sleLe 


SPRING SONG WATER BABY* 
BRONZE STATUETTE ; PLASTER FIGURE 
Bis lara ANTERA SaDANGE 
BRONZE HEAD BRONZE STATUETTE 

ELIZABETH 


BRONZE BUST 


Pl MSO) NSA Vi Acca ate ies 


INTO THE UNKNOWN* 
FIGURE FOR SEAL OF NATIONAL SCULPTURE SOCIETY, COLORED PLASTER 


SOLDIERS AND SAILORS MEMORIAL PYLONS 
(LORD AND HEWLETT—ARCH.) PHILADELPHIA, PA. 


PAs ease eee lets 


DIANA* 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


338 


Pie er Oa Ctl Lara leOthvoncASNG Daler Bs UR? EX HT BAST. S 


POW Vita Bik 


ELIOT NORTON LINCOLN 
BRONZE HEAD BRONZE BUST 


JULIA LINDEMANN 
BRONZE BAS-RELIEF 


ated ie Wh tet, NUBReC Ne TOM ee 


REAR-ADMIRAL GOLDSBOROUGH 
BRONZE BUST 


MINNA McCANN 


PARTING DAY UNDINE 
SILVERED BAS-RELIEF COLORED PLASTER STATUETTE 
IS IDI WRI EKG ANRC AL 
DIANA* NYMPH AND SATYR 
SMALL BRONZE GROUP BRONZE GROUP 


EUGENE FIELD MEMORIAL 
COLORED PLASTER REPLICA OF MONUMENT, LINCOLN PARK, CHICAGO, ILL. 


eee sical eal enVC Kran) 7 


hy PERION, THE PLUNGER BONeS COUT 
BRONZE STATUETTE BRONZE STATUETTE 
PeigeeAN © Re MieM E tnt OuN 
BELEN* Gad as: 
MARBLE BUST BRONZE STATUETTE 


OT IN eC rey ey cE NCB Fa RaG 
BeEE NSS erOk KA liZORsAS GIL D 
PLASTER BUST 
plea se eG ny Le 
FOUNTAIN FIGURE 
PLASTER 
MONE IP Sy WUE EGE Ny ss 
THE ARTISTS MOTHER 
MARBLE BUST 
VISA eX eWeek le eeelVinte tele he 


DANIEL COIT GILMAN* 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


329 


PS: Ore 9S Cour PaO RES) VAIN. Dai Roe Eexaiiat ee ee 


PIETRO MONTANA 


PORTRAIT OF A YOUTH MY PARENTS 
BRONZED PLASTER BUST BRONZE BAS-RELIEF 
SAV UTE ESM RIB ay: 
THOMAS EAKINS THE BOXER 
BRONZE STATUETTE BRONZE FIGURE 
Sil GU URSID IN BeAr O05 
GEN. GEORGE W. GOETHALS HON. CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW 
BRONZED PLASTER HEAD BRONZE HEAD 
Bee Ral rhOdle DaNi Bille 
THEAW REST PEK Ss: MATERNITY 
PLASTER GROUP PLASTER 
PORTRAIT BUST 
BRONZE 
TOS: Ping NG OFF Gs 
THE SORROW 


PLASTER STALUE 


"CHA RIGESOHGENIDE Hes 


CAESTUS FRANCIS SCOTT KEY MEMORIAL* 
BRONZE STATUE PLASTER REPLICA OF MONUMENT, BALTI- 
MORE, MD. 


JOSEPH JEFFERSON 
COLORED PLASTER BUST GOOSE BOY 
SMALL BRONZE 


JOHN QUINCY ADAMS WARD 
BRONZE HALF-FIGURE, LOANED BY THE NATIONAL SCULPTURE SOCIETY 
GPU Tt OFINION AINA 


MYSPFA DHE PORTRAIT OF A NEGRO 
BRONZE BUST BRONZED PLASTER BUST 


ALN DIR ESWe ©. © MENTO es ote 


MA].-GEN. RUFUS PUTNAM 
PLASTER MEDALLION 


ALN D RE WO; GOUNEN Olea ie 
THE MASK LINCOLN HEAD 
PLASTER HEAD BRONZE 


COMMODORE JOHN BARRY* 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


340 


PoaGSri OC) Beas (Ula ORS eA N Del HE URS Ex HT BATS 


Wellin Astal) ele beal DO ak 


YOUNG GIRL EDWARD C. MERSHON MEMO- 
BRONZED PLASTER, REPLICA OF BUST RIAL FOUNTAIN* 
IN BROOKLYN MUSEUM COLORED PLASTER 


J) JST ETRC IS VO ZEN I ee de 


escomhy, WHIPPET DOG JULIUS ROSENWALD, JR. 
BRONZE STATUETTE COLORED PLASTER HEAD 


Peale lies a BeAG Kes Os 


THE BABY GOAT BABY PAN 
BRONZE FIGURINE BRONZE SEATED FIGURE 


Nites BiG DUCK 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


Rem eNO Nee b Rs RY. 


BO Vow) Leb ISE EP OUN TAIN: FIGOURE* 
BRONZE STATUE 


Palme lmigien Ome Gl Kelis 


FRAGMENT HEAD OF BOY WITH SILVER 
BUST IN SIENNA MARBLE COLLAR 
MARBLE 
GIULIANELLO, FLORENTINE 
BOY BOY OF THE PIAVE* 
BUST IN MARBLE AND WOOD PLASTER STATUE 
FRAGILINA 


MARBLE STATUE 


Peo Mm alee hell a 


HURY DICE MOTHER AND CHILD 
MARBLE FULL-RELIEF MARBLE STATUE 
MADONNA* NARCISSUS 
OVAL BAS-RELIEF, MARBLE BRONZE STATUETTE 
OM RerMGas Vee eC WiRca iE Ie 
COCK* 


BRONZED PLASTER 


TABU See tat UZ 


JOSEPHEPENNELL 
BRONZE BAS-RELIEF 


341 


DESO gs GUS PO RS ALN DeeieH bha box riiebasier 


AL BENCPOLAGEAK 


HOWARD V. SHAW THE MAIDEN 
BRONZE BUST BRONZED PLASTER STATUE 


MAN CHISELING HIS OWN DESTINY* 
BRONZE 


PAN 
BRONZE STATUE 


ACIZE Oe SONS) Ee Rea Keele Oral 


PROF. ALONZO BROWN FREDERIC VAUX WISTAR 
BRONZE BUST BRONZE BUST 


PROP "GHAR ES VHA WALIs 
BRONZE HEAD 


RENEE PRAHAR 


GROUP, OF JAGUARS EEDESTAL 
BLACK MARBLE 


Ae Peres: Eee PO Gre is 


INDIAN WARRIOR* % ON THE WAR PATH 

SMALL BRONZE COLORED PLASTER EQUESTRIAN GROUP 
TIGERANOS TIGER NO{2 

PLASTER PLASTER 


PANEL, LIONS 
COLORED PLASTER 


BRENDA PUTNAM 
MISCHIEVOUS FAUN PABLO CASALS 


PLASTER FIGURE BRONZE BUST, LOANED BY THE HIS- 
PANIC MUSEUM, N. Y. 


EDM OWN Ds) O Ong 


VICENTE BLASCO-IBANEZ ViGTORY2 
BRONZE BUST REPLICA IN COLORED PLASTER OF 
MONUMENT, NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y. 
FRED DANA MARSH YOUTH 
BRONZE HEAD BRONZE STATUETTE 


HA RERSY 7 Be Wile Sas eee 


LAUGHING MERMAIDS 
SMALL BRONZE GROUP 


342 


poe eo tee CU Laka ORs AYN De HAIR bX HI BEES 


GICs NCI) Jel Jeet ew LOK Ga ir 


SIREN 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


DREAMER 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


[ay mele P oe Kaleo shal aay, 


peat ED FIGURE 
SMALL BRONZE 


HEAD 
PLASTER 


PROGESSIONAL 
PLASTER FLOWER BOX 


er RO) lee hele ©.C 


FOUNTAIN FIGURE NO. 1 
STONE 


FOUNTAIN FIGURE NO. 2 
PLASTER 


Pipe be Nee ay Be Raye hi BINS ON 


ANN 
MARBLE HEAD 


IBIS, FOUNTAIN MODEL 
COLORED PLASTER 


Pepe Oh he GR ek OnE 


IN CENTRAL PARK 
SMALL BRONZE 


HEAD OF A MORGAN HORSE 
SMALL BRONZE 


RABBIT FOR BIRD FOUNTAIN 
PLASTER GROUP 


JOCK 
BRONZE DOG, LOANED BY MR. W.C. 
TEAGLE 


HIGHLAND BULL* 
COLORED PLASTER 


PUMA 
SMALL BRONZE 


POLAR BEARS 
COLORED PLASTER GROUP 


AKELA 
BRONZE DOG, 
SUMNER 


LOANED BY MRS. 


Bearer ere MB Ol Dok GiliN 
TWO FIGURES CARVED, IN; WALNUT 


COUAUIIE AD sy TO Vo shel Ohi Poy rea ¢ 


DANCING FIGURE 
SMALL BRONZE 


THE PAGAN 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


FIGHTING HORSES 
SMALL BRONZE 


LEAPING DEER 
SMALL BRONZE 


DRESBUBL 
SMALL BRONZE 


BUFFALO COW AND CALF 
BRONZE GROUP 


SP GEORGE 
SMALL BRONZE 


THE CENTAUR 
BRONZE STATUETTE 


343 


DYES TOF (SG UdIZP AT ORANG CTAB Ree Xe eS 


GARI ES | GACRSYe eas Vito ay = Gon TINGED 
VICTORY* SOLDIERS AND: SAIL- COLORED CEMENT FRIEZE DE 


ORS MEMORIAL PICTING SPORTS, PELHAM BAY 
PLASTER REPLICA OF MONUMENT, PARK 
BROWNSVILLE, N. Y. PLASTER REPLICA 


ANTONIO SAIS E Mave 
OLD SCOTCH WOMAN MASTER LEIGHTON ROPER 
BRONZE BUST COLORED PLASTER HEAD 
VEN? @AEAN orn 1 eNO 


NYMPH 
BRONZED PLASTER FIGURE 


WARC ALON ee OE NA IOs. 


TOP KNOT—BABY HEAD MEMORY 
MARBLE MARBLE STATUETTE 


MRS. CHAPMAN* 
MARBLE BUST, LOANED BY MRS. RICHARD MORTIMER 


ESD WAR DEE. SAIN Oe 
GREAT DANE* 
MARBLE DOG 
Becks UG. Bas W eS AO Vel lar 
DR. WILLIAM OXLEY THOMPSON 
BRONZE BUST 
ANTON SCHAAF 
DR. ROBERT R. MEREDITH MEMORIAL 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 
EUACNES, SiC Eis Paras 
DRA GOUCHERS PARADISE LOST. 
HEROIC BRONZE BUST PLASTER GROUP 
[Ose TRO as: Gia rial e/eras 


GEORGE P. MORGAN H. MELCHIOR MUHLENBERG 
PLASTER BUST HEAD 


344 


Pes bees CAUb ePrice) Rio AON De Lite T Roe xX: A 1B ITS 


EAE Eas Clr) iE: 


BIRD BATH VICTORY* 

BRONZE SEATED FIGURE BRONZE STATUETTE 
YOUNG DIANA CHARLES P. HUNTINGTON ME- 
' BRONZE FIGURE MORIAL 


BRONZE BAS-RELIEF 


eee bei RED) 


THE BRONCO TWISTER THE MAVERICK 
BRONZE EQUESTRIAN STATUETTE BRONZE EQUESTRIAN STATUETTE 


RUS SERE KW O OD 


ST. FRANCIS AND THE WOLF OF GUBBIO 
PLASTER GROUP 


Disease eVie eorheA Day. 


MRS. A. M. S. FRAGMENT, J. COOK MEMORIAL 
BRONZE STATUETTE PLASTER 

SAVING THE COLORS CAVALRY GROUP, GRANT MON- 
BRONZE GROUP, LOANED BY MRS. E. UMENT 
GOULD PLASTER MODEL 


PORTRAIT BUST OF A CHILD,G.B. ARTILLERY GROUP, GRANT MON- 


BRONZED PLASTER UMENT* 

ite Everly SADDLE WASHINGTON AT VALLEY FORGE 
SMALL BRONZE, LOANED BY MRS. E. BRONZE EQUESTRIAN GROUP LOANED BY 
GOULD MRS. E. GOULD 


eV eye etl eV OUNES 


HORSE SCRATCHING THOROUGHBRED MARE 
BRONZE BRONZE 

SURPRISE THE BELL-MARE 
SMALL BRONZE BRONZE 


HE STORMENEW SY ORK POLICES 
SMALL BRONZE 


Pe NTE ee EV Gas ale eae Oia 


J. E. NASH 
COLORED PLASTER BUST 


345 


ISDS POR ss GG Pst Reseed, NDP ror hae ii ae) 


GX eae Rio tae 


MEDITATION EDUCATION 
COLORED PLASTER HEAD PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


EAE NO DUS eye ORC bey Syibic RL EIN 


YOUNG KID AFRAID 

PLASTER PLASTER GROUP 
DECORATIVE PANEL, CHARAC- PASTOROL 
TER STUDIES OF A GOAT COLORED PLASTER PANEL 


COLORED PLASTER 


PAL eo Wen 


DOULEUR EESTI WESECK GET: 
PLASTER MASQUE PLASTER HEAD 


LE OUR) OAs all 


DETAIL FROM FOUNTAIN OF MASK, FROM FOUNTAIN OF TIME 
TIME* CEMENT, TO SHOW MATERIAL 
COLORED PLASTER 


GRA CEST tie res Om 


VENICE INVINCIBLE 4 MDI EID) 
PLASTER FIGURE BRONZE GROUP 


POLY GN OFGO Se AR Ryser 


REPENTANCE MRR. BOULES 
BRONZED PLASTER FIGURE PLASTER HEAD 


YOUNG BOULES 
PLASTER HEAD 


Soe Ge ea de eB) Ishin 


ViAore 
BRONZE 


340 


ote a a be O Rigg ANID) sl ECE Rive XsH TB LTS 


Diet ie ell Eo Rsv ON INO H 


oN et 8 Ut Od Sie MOTHERHOOD 
SMALL BRONZE BRONZE GROUP 
WILL-O-THE-WISP ADOLESCENCE 
BRONZE STATUETTE BRONZE FIGURE 
PIGeke- FOR BIRD BATH YOUNG MOTHER 
BRONZE BRONZE GROUP 
ALLEGRESSE 


BRONZE GROUP 


ROE hele Ge Weak MAN 


PORSURA TI OF @MISS = MM: 
MARBLE MEDALLION 


Dei etepte ey ee WV crab Kak 


BENEDICTION, MITCHELL MEMORIAL* 
PLASTER REPLICA OF MONUMENT, CADILLAC, MICH. 


OMG sand GS ell, JIE gS 


Se LeNGE* PHILOSOPELY 
MODEL FOR FAGADE, LELAND STAN- MODEL FOR FACADE, LELAND! STAN- 
FORD UNIVERSITY FORD UNIVERSITY 


WOU EASA (ey Gel NEN aR en Ike 


ia iP CONSOLATION 
SMALL BRONZE COLORED PLASTER STATUETTE 


io) Ole PatigeAce \WiEsiIN Vi ASIN 


GEN. MACOMB MEMORIAL—MRS. JAMESSPEYER 
HEROIC BRONZE BUST PLASTER REPLICA OF MONUMENT IN 
SLEEPY HOLLOW CEMETERY, TARRY- 
DUET TOWN 
BRONZE GROUP 
NARCISSUS* 
MRS. QUINTON MASON are 
SILVERED BRONZE BUST 
ON NIMBLE TOE LINCOLN 
BRONZE STATUETTE HEROIC BRONZE HEAD 


MRS SAY DIRDSCH Ess |e 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


347 


Labs. SOIr SG UMrP TO. Res AGN.D hE Re ore ales 


MAK TEA) RoW. NY OGErR 
GROUP OF SIX MINIATURE BRONZE DANCERS 
IN GLASS CASE 
KAS IAP aN Ee Walters tele 
DEATH SAND SLEEP 
BRONZE ANIMAL GROUP 
GEERSLER UD a ACN DI EeREB TEL Var ean See 


HEAD, TITANIC MEMORIAL THE NUN 
BELGIAN MARBLE BELGIAN MARBLE STATUETTE 


FOURTH DIVISION MEMORIAL* 
PLASTER REPLICA OF MONUMENT, ARLINGTON CEMETERY, WASHINGTON, D. C. 


AD T@ESM Or: GaN Ww Ro Galiels 


WIND FIGURE YOUNG FAUN 
STONE BRONZE STATUETTE 


WA HONS YO WING 


THESRIGGER THE PIPERCAT THE GA 
BRONZE STATUETTE BRONZE 

Tit G@hl Stir FRENCH IRON WORKER 
BRONZE STATUETTE SMALL BRONZE 

THES EV EDORE. THE SHOVELER 
BRONZE STATUETTE SMALL BRONZE 


BOVE T ARTHUR Ay EABORER 
SMALL BRONZE 


BR CUN OB ©. Sm 7a evi’ 


KARTS PETER 
PLASTER BAS-RELIEF 


348 


epee Vig DPA WaleS tS 
AND 
JO TAME: se Je sels h hos) 


ee GeO ee Vir DA aS les 
AND 
IP ables Hit Tete seb TES 


HERBERT ADAMS 


jesePiet. GHOATE, 1632=1917* 
STRUCK MEDAL, OBV. SILVER, REV. BRONZE 


Die WI. 


CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


MRS. BILLINGS 
GALVANO BRONZED PLAQUE 


IN MEMORIAM 
CAST BRONZE, PLAQUE 


ROBERT: 


ELIZABETH N. WATROUS AWARD, N. 
2 Di 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


DESIGN FOR VERDUN MEDAL 
DESIGN FOR MARKSMAN MEDAL 


MISSOURI CENTENNIAL HALF-DOL- 
LAR 1821-1921 DESIGN 


NEW YORK CHAPTER AMERICAN 
INSTEIUTEOF ARCHITECTS 
GALVANO BRONZED, MODEL FOR MEDAL 


PEGGY GANT I? 
GALVANO BRONZED PLAQUE 


EVAN, ARNOLD, AND WILLIAM 
FRASER CAMPBELL 
CAST BRONZE PLAQUE 


AITKEN 


VISTI Ore ARSHALSFOCHs TOsTHE 
UNITEDSSTA TES) 1921" 
STRUCK MEDAL, OBV. SILVER, REV. BRONZE 


SAME] LAKGE MODEL 
PLASTER 


Desa EVES DOLEARSDESIGN—SEE 
NOSEV Pore AK NO EVI bP ib AR NO 
EVI 

CAST MEDALLION, LEAD 


PIED Eh ATKINS 


Meee wower ART INSTITUTE 


AWARD 


SFRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE (GALVANO, MOUNT- 


ED ON WOOD) 


PORTRAIT REEIEF, 19to 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE MOUNTED ON WOOD 


NADELE UNE Ay BAR TICE Ty) 


MARY LODER, 


1921 


CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


CHES PPRSBEACH 


GE BOREN'S: YEAR* 
CHILDREN’S BUREAU, U. S, DEPARTMENT OF 
LABOR, STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE 


SAME. LARGE MODEL 
GALVANO BRONZED 


SCHOOLTART LEAGUE* 


ST. GAUDENS MEDAL FOR DRAUGHTSMANSHIP, 
I1Q17, STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


SAMES VAKRGE-MODEE 
GALVANO BRONZED 


PEACE OPSVERSAICLEES® 
STRUCK MEDAL, OBV. SILVER, REV. BRONZE 


*THE ASTERISK FOLLOWING THE NAME OF A SUBJECT INDICATES THAT SUCH SUBJECT IS ILLUSTRATED 


351 


LYS TO ME DAIS TS TAIN DO) Hi Pet Rear Ash lara 


EDWARD BERGE 


JACK LAMBDIN* 
PLAQUETTE, GALVANO GILT 


WILLIAM B. GRAVES* 


CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE GILT, MOUNTED 


ON WOOD 


HELENE 
PLAQUETTE, GALVANO GILT, MOUNTED ON 
WooD 


HOCHSCHILD, KOHN & CO., SILVER 
ANNIVERSARY, 1922 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, WITH RING 


CAROLYN DANIELS 
PLAQUETTE, GALVANO GILT, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


VICTORS D BRENNER 


SAMUEBLOPTAV ER mot? 
STRUCK MEDAL, OBV. SILVER, REV. BRONZE 


ABRAHAM WALKOWITZ, 1922 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE GILT 


AMBROSE SWASEY, 1915 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE UNIFACE 


THE WARNER AND SWASEY CO., 
CLEVELAND, OHIO, 1880-1920 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE OBV. 


GEORGE BAILEY HOPSON, D. D., 1863- 


1913 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE OBV. 


JOHN HAY, THE ROWFANTSCEUOB 
CLEVELAND; OHIO isi2= 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE OBV. 


G. STANLEY HALL, TWENTDY-rini 
ANNIVERSARY OF CLARK UNIVER- 
Slay 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


PEACE, 1919* 
LARGE PLAQUE, GALVANO GILT, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


Ee LOREAGA DORN 


FOUR SMALL IVORY PLAQUETTES 


TRAGEDYS ss LHEGAR US pba ed’ 


TULLIA MISS DOROTHY WARNER 


MABEL CONKLING 


REV. NATHANIEL W. CONKLING - 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


MRS. JOHN SARGENT 
CAST, MEDALLION, BRONZE 


FRANCIS WILSON, 1907 
COLORED PLASTER MEDALLION 


GEN. JOHN TUDOR RICHARDS, 1916 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


MY BABY 
GILT PLASTER MEDALLION 


PAUL CONKLING 
COLORED PLASTER PLAQUE 


FREDERICK W. MAC MONNIES* 
COLORED PLASTER PLAQUE, OVAL 


PAUL CONKLING 


BARONESS DE KNOOP 
PLAQUETTE, GALVANO GILT, UNIFACE 


GAIL SHERMAN CORBET 


MARY HONE, 1919 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE UNIFACE 


JEAN, 1908 
CAST PLAQUETTE, GALVANO GILT, UNIFACE 


352 


Toei Or evi ey leo leo AON D vist ERE EXOH TB ITS 


GAIL SHERMAN CORBETT—Conrtinugeb. 


FREDERICK COE SHERMAN, 1908 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


JOHN, 1916 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE UNIFACE 


MARY ROWENA AND KATHERINE 
NASH 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


Cy RU Sars 


HOMAGE TO MARSHAL FOCH* 


STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


EMMA J. O. SHERMAN, 1908 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE UNIFACE 


DEDICATIONVOF THE MUNICIPAL 
BUIMDINGS,” “SPRINGFIELD, -MASS., 
1913. STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


JOHN NEWBOLD HAZARD 
CAST MEDAL, GALVANO, UNIFACE 


DALLIN 


PILGRIM TERCENTENARY, 1620-1920 
SILVER HALF DOLLAR, OBV. AND REV. 


MERION CRICKET CLUB, NATIONAL ARCHERY ASSOCIATION 
OF PHESUNITED STATES 


STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


APRON Y sDEerRANCISC] 


THERESA 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE PATINED 


JAMES DOUGLAS, AMERICAN INSTI- 
TUTE OF MINING AND METALLURGI- 
GAL ENGINEERS* 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


SANiE-—-LAKRGE MODEL 
CAST MEDALLION 


SEWANAKA-CORINTHIAN YACHT 
CLuuB* 


STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. AND REV. 


HENRY DOHERTY MORREX 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE GILT, OBV. 


JAMES MORRIS 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE GILT 


ADOLPH A. WEINMAN 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE SILVERED 


ALESSANDRO L. CHIOSTERGI 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


JAMES VAN DE WYNGAARD 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE GILT 


DAMIANO GIUSEPPE VULETICH 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


EMILIO ANGELA 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


URS TSI LY ERS DOLLA RS 
OBV. AND REV. 


PRESIDENT WILSON 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. 


SAME 
PLASTER MODEL 


THERESA 
PLASTER PLAQUE 


tH Ege PEOPEE SM Obese. NLLED 

STATES OFF HEZCIA YORE DUN 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE GILT, OBV. AND 
TWO REVERSES 


BENEDETTO:DE PRANCISCI 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


PAUL N. RADULICH 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE GILT 


FIVE U.S. ARMY INSIGNIA 
BRONZE 


OHIOSTATE UNIVERSITY, JOURNAL- 
ISM 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


MAINE CENTENNIAL 
HALF-DOLLAR 
SILVER, OBV. AND REV. 


1820-1920, 


353 


LAS WO Rave Ee DvAr PS TS eeASN ED lob iki ele 


UERI@sH EE LEREPUSEN 


SeeLOuUIS ARI EEAGUESMEDAIES 


STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


MEDAL WITH ENAMELED WINGS* 
DESIGN 


PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD WAR- 
SERVICE MEDAL* 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


FREDERICK DOUGLAS “MEMORIA 
TABLET, 
DETAIL SKETCHES 


LOUTSAZ EY RE 


CHARLES E. DANA WATER COLOR MEDAL, PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY 3a0r, 
FINE ARTS AWARD 
STRUCK MEDAL (GALVANO, MOUNTED IN FRAME) 


SALLY JAMES FARNHAM 


NATIONAL NAVY CLUB 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


COMMEMORATION OF THE EREC- 
TION OF THE EQUESTRAN ST 
UE OF BOLIVAR 

CENTRAL PARK, NEW YORK, 1921 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


PAUESE} @ieD i 


PEORIA’ SOCIETY, OF FALLIED AKAs; 
AWARD, 1920* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE (GALVANO GILT, 
OBV. AND REV. MOUNTED ON WOOD) 


WAR SERVICE AWARD TO THE MEN 
OF GLENCOE, ILL.. 1919* 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE GALVANO 
GILT, OBV. AND REV. MOUNTED ON WOOD 


JOHN FLANAGAN 


DANIEL CHESTER FRENCH 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


ALLAN MARQUAND 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


PAUP WW. BARTEEL DT 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


JOSEPHePENNELL 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


WALTER GRIFFIN 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


J. ALDEN WEIR 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


GARDEN CLUB OF AMERICA 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


SCHOOL ART LEAGUE OF NEW YORK, 
1915 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY AWARD 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE OBV. AND REV. 


FREDERICK JAMES GREGG 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


ANDRE SAGLIO 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE 


H. R. H. THE PRINCE OR WARES 
AMERICAN NUMISMATIC SOCIETY, 


1919 
STRUCK MEDAL, OBV. SILVER, REV. BRONZE 


H. R. H. THE PRINCE OF WALES; 1oig 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


WAR 
MASS.* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


SERVICE-“MEDAL, MAKIGn: 


CAPT. ED YARDE SB REPSi 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE 


354 


Siem ey EDA Mo lSe AND Sr HETR EX APBITS 


JOHN FLANAGAN—ContINueb. 


LO THE CITY OF VERDUN FROM THE 
BeOELE OF THE UNITED STATES* 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


CAPT. H. ROSTRON, TITANIC MEMO- 
RIAL 
STRUCK MEDAL BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


BARK FERREE 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE 


nemlecuULITURAL SOCIETY, ESSEX CO., 
MASS. 


STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


PORTRAIT 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


Pe 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


DEDICATION OF STATUE OF LAFAY- 
BULA METZ, 10920 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


WALT WHITMAN 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


CAPT. JOHN OAKMAN 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 


JANE Sse AREER FRASER 


FLORA AND SONNY BOY WHITNEY 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


MR. COLE 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


A. QUIMBY 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


STEPHANY RASMUS 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


Py Or st UDIES FOR DISTINGUISHED 
pakVv ICE GROSS* 


MODEL FOR EDISON MEDAL 
CAST BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


HOWLAND MEMORIAL, YALE UNI- 
VERSITY 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


AMERICAN ACADEMY OF ARTS AND 
EE PrERS 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


SlUDY FOR AN EAGLE 
CAST BRONZE 


AMERICAN COMMITTEE FOR THE 
DEVASTATED REGIONS OF FRANCE* 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


SAME 
SMALL STRUCK MEDAL, SILVER 


DAVID BARNARD ERICSON 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


BREWSTER BABY 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE 


JOR DES KE LCHES FOR MEDALS 


MRa FISHER 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


Ose ely be CENT PI RG 
NICKEL, OBV. AND REV. 


MODEL FOR NAVAL CONGRESSION- 
AL MEDAL OF HONOR 


ENAMELED BRONZE 


WILLIAMS COLLEGE WAR SERVICE 
MEDAL* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


SAINT GAUDENS MEDAL, PAN- 
AMERICAN EXPOSITION 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


SAME—LARGE MODEL 
CAST BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


E. H. HARRIMAN MUSEUM OF 


Sy Vedi ye 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF GRAPHIC 
ARTS AWARD, 1920 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


HENRY SCHOELKOPF 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


MR. AND MRS. ALBRIGHT* 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


355 


LS OFM ED AGE SillSe A N Der ES Re ee Pelee tes 


LAURA GARDIN FRASER 


BETTER BABIES* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. 


IRISH SETEER CLUBOF AMERICA™ 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. 


SAME—LARGE MODEL 
CAST 


ANTHONY N. BRADY SAFETY MEDAL 
PLASTER MODEL 


ARMY AND NAVY CHAPLAINS 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, UNIFACE 


THE LONG, LONG TRAIL 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


JOHN, CARDINAL FARLEY 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


ALABAMA CENTENNIAL HALF-DOLLAR 


1819-1910, 
SILVER, OBV. AND REV. 


ROSEMARY HALL, 1915* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. AND 
REV. 


DANIEL“C. 


VISIT TO NEW YORK OF FRENCH 
AND BRITISH WAR COMMISSIONS, 
1917 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


COMPUETION® | OFoe THEM GAT SKI 
AQUEDUCT, tor7* 


CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. (REV. BY A. 


LUKEMAN) 


MEMORIAL TO LAFAYETTE, BROOK- 
LYN, 1917 
(A. LUKEMAN AFTER D. C. FRENCH) 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


MRS. E. H. HARRIMAN 
PLASTER PLAQUE 


BIDE-A-WEE HOME FOR DOGS 
BRONZE GILT, UNIFACE 


SAME--LARGE-MODEL 
CAST 


NATIONAL 
SCIENGES 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


MORGAN HORSE CLUB . 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


GIRL SCOUT GOLDEN EAGLE 
BRONZE GILT 


GRANT MEMORIAL HALF-DOLLAR, 
1822-1922 
SILVER 


INSTITUTE OF SS0iera 


GRANT 
1922 
GOLD 


NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL 
SCIENCES 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, REV. 


PRENCH 


ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUESORSNEW 
YORK, PRESIDENT 3S) PRIZEs 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE, OBV. 


MEMORIAL, DOLLAR, 1822- 


COMPLETION OF THE SCATSi 
AQUEDUCT Vigor 
SMALL STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND 
REV. 


THE AMERICAN RED? CROSS; 


1919* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


IQ17— 


JOSEPH PULITZER MEDAL AWARDED BY COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY TO “THE 
WORLD? jro21 
(D. C. FRENCH AND A. LUKEMAN) STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


PVIESEUGTIS 


PEACE AND WAR 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


SAME—LARGE MODEL 
CAST 


ROBERT W. HUNT* 


STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, OBV. SILVER, 
AND REV. BRONZE 


SAME—LARGE MODEL 


PLASTER 


356 


Dal Sele Fee e DeAisd SoenN DF Li BR LE XH 1B 1S 


EMIL FUCHS—ContTINUED. 


Eee tlEINZ COOLIDGE MEMORIAL TABLET 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE 
HOWARD HEINZ SAME—LARGE MODEL 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. PLASTER 
eae HEINZ RUST HEINZ 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. STRUCK MEDALLION, BRONZE, OBV. 
MME. PIERRE CARTIER MARION CARTIER 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE CAST MEDAL, BRONZE 
AUDREY NOEL 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


SKETCHES FOR H. J]. HEINZ MEMO- lO NG ee Wal 
RIAL PLAQUETTE, CAST BRONZE 
BRONZE BAS-RELIEFS 
DRAWINGS AND STUDIES FOR 
Sit | CHES MEDALS 
IN PLASTER, BRONZE AND TERRA-COTTA 


FRANCES GRIMES 


LOUIS HENRY DOW CAROLYN AND PATRICIA CLE- 
PLAQUETTE, GILT, MOUNTED ON WOOD MENT* 
PLAQUETTE, GILT, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


HAROLD TRIPP» CLEMENI* 
PLAQUETTE, GALVANO GILT, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


ERNEST SB ASW ELE 


EV iEEY Ny 1622 
MEDALLION, GALVANO GILT, ON WOOD 


GE ME Sele UNCON 


ROBERTS LOUISes 1 EV ENSON? 10237 
PLASTER MEDALLION, OBV. AND REV. 


ANNASV ELLY ALT 
JOAN OF ARC, 16107 
STRUCK MEDAL, OBV. SILVER, REV. BRONZE 
JEAN JUSZKO 
LIEDERKRANZ BIEEIARD CLUB 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE OBY. 


GOZO KAWAMURA 


AMERICAN JEKSEY CATTLE CLUB AWARD 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. AND REV. 


3271, 


LUST 0.8 eM EDA iS 1S “SAWN De Tir Ik Raabe ht ere 


LORIOSK TERN 


ALBERT. A. STANLEY, UNIVERSITY GENERAL WILLIAM A. KETCHAM 
OF MICHIGAN AWARD STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


MOLIERE TERCENTENARY, 1622-1922 S. L. ROTHAFEL 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


GRAND CONCLAVE OF THE ACACIA “RICHARD BARTHELMESS 


FRATERNITY STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, UNIFACE 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, UNIFACE 
NATIONAL SILK WEEK, SILK ASSO- 
CRANFORD CIVIC AWARD CIATION OF AMERICA, 1921 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE 


ANNA COLEMAN LADD 


AMERICAN WOMEN’S OVERSEAS CONSCIENCE 
SERVICE LEAGUE PATINED BRONZE PLAQUE 


PATINED BRONZE MEDAL, OBV. 
SERBIAN RELIEF 
NEW ENGLAND-ITALIAN WAR RE- STRUCK MEDAL, SILVER, OBV.—WITH RING 
LIEF FUND 
STRUCK MEDAL, SILVER, WITH RING SAINT—GEORGE FOR VICTORY 
STRUCK MEDAL, SILVER, OBV.—WITH RING 


BERENICE* LANGTON 


TAURUS MRS. W. G. SOMERVILLE AND 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, PATINED, UNIFACE MASTER SOMERVILLE 
GALVANO SILVERED PLAQUE 


DEATH SHOWED HIM LOVELY IN AQUARIUS 


THIS LOVELY FACE CAST MEDAL, BRONZE 
CAST BRONZE PLAQUETTE, UNIFACE 

GEMINI AMY MALI HICKS, to11 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


MRS. FRANCES G. LLOYD, 1915 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


GEORGs slo bik 


FRANK BACON 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


EVELYN B. LONGMAN 
MR. AND MRS. ROBERT DE FOREST LOOMIS MEDAL FOR ATHEE TG. 


1972-1922" (OBV. GALVANO GILT, MOUNTED ON WOOD) 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT (OBV. AND 
REV. GALVANOS, MOUNTED ON WOOD) SAME—LARGE MODEL 


PLASTER GILT 
SAME—LARGE MODEL 


(OBV.—GALVANO GILT ON WOOD) GWENDOLEN SEDGWICK BATCH- 
ELDER 
SAME—LARGE MODEL STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


PLASTER GILT——OBV. 


358 


nos ROtevie Alla icoolss eA N Del HE bREvE xXoH TT BIT T.S 


HERMON A. MacNEIL 


Pow keer PASTER eS MODELS, Us °S. 
QUARTER-DOLLAR 
OBV. AND REV. 


Poker eLASTER MODELS, U.S. DIME 
REV. 


TWO PLASTER MODELS, ARCHITEC- 
AURAL LEAGUE 
OBY. AND REV. 


muccH! LECTURAL LEAGUE* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


MO-LI 


CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


POPPENHUSEN INSTITUTE MEDAL 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBY. 


TWO PLASTER MODELS, PAN-AMERI- 
CAN EXPOSITION 
OBV. AND REV. 


PAN-AMERICAN EXPOSITION, 
BUFEFALO* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


1901 


Woo, QUARTER, DOLLAR* 
SILVER, OBV. AND REV. 


E-WE 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


PAUL MANSHIP 


Sleenul INSTITUTE* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


MAXFIELD PARRISH, 1915 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


BARRY FAULKNER, PAINTER, 1915 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


WELLS BOSWORTH, ARCHITECT, 1920 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


WAR SERVICE 
DETROIT, 1919 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


Pacha wAR RELIEF* 
CAST PIECE, BRONZE, MOUNTED 


MEDAL CITY VOr 


JOAN OF ARC* 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


ROBERT P. PERKINS, AMERICAN 
RED CROSS UN TFALY, 1918 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


Vist 2ORm Lib PRESIDENT-ELECT 
PESSOA OF BRAZIL LO THE UNITED 
SN DE ear OIG 

CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


THECCIVICw FORUMS TOs COLR.G WwW. 
GOETHALS, 1914 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


SATIRICAL WAR MEDAL, KULTUR 
IN BELGIUM 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


EDWARD McCARTAN 


HAROLD VAN 


1919* 
CAST PLAQUETTE, 
WOOD 


BUREN MAGONIGLE, 


BRONZE, MOUNTED ON 


ADRIAN, 1920: 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


Ree AL eV ChKENZ ITE 


EDWARD LONGSTRETH, MEDAL OF 
MERIT, FRANKLIN INSTITUTE FOR 
SCIENCE, 1919* 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


Memeo CLUB, 1921 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


JOHN McCLURE HAMILTON 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 


INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETIC sAS- 
SOCIATION, 1917 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


LORD SEAFORTH* 
PLASTER PLAQUE 


MARQUIS OF ABERDEEN AND TEM- 
AIR 
PLASTER PLAQUE 


359 


Lei Sor OF MED A LAlitSs AGN Dest Hii Rea Sete lel 


R. TAIT McKENZIE—ContTINUED. 


ROBERT JONES PHILADELPHIASKET CH CLES 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 
JOYSOPTEPEORTS S. WEIR MITCHELL 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE 


VISCOUNTESS FOLKESTONE 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE 
MAX WE CIM NEE R: 


DEBATING PRIZE IN MEMORY OF JAMES, CARDINAL GIBBONS, 1861- 
GEORGE CAMERON, JR[-AND, MAY “a911- 


BRODNAX CAMERON STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE, MOUNTED ON GALVANOS MOUNTED ON WOOD 
WOOD 
DR. WILLIAM SYDNEY THAYER, BAL- JAMES, CARDINAL GIBBONS, 1861- 
TIMORE, 1912 1QII 
STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE (OBV. GALVANO LARGE MODEL, GALVANO OBV., MOUNTED 
ON WOOD) ON WOOD 
DR. WILLIAM SYDNEY THAYER, BAL- DR. ISAAC RIDGEWAY ‘TRIMBLE, 
TIMORE, 1912 1861—1908* 
LARGE MODEL PLAQUE, GALVANO, MOUNTED STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, OBV. AND 
ON WOOD REV. 
MR. AND MRS. MICHAEL JENKINS MICHAEL JENKINS, 1914 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE (OBV. AND REV. STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 
GALVANOS) 


EUGENE H. MORAHAN 


MARLBORO CHALLENGE CUP FOR GIG HORSES 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE (GALVANO, MOUNTED ON WOOD) 


MAY MOTT-SMITH 


GENRE MEDAL—THE WIDOW . KATHERINE MACDONALD 
CAST MEDAL BRONZE, UNIFACE CAST MEDAL, BRONZE—UNIFACE 


MR. AND MRS. JOHN MOTT-SMITH THEODORE SPICER-SIMSON 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. MOUNTED ON CAST MEDAL, OBV. MOUNTED ON WOOD 


WOOD 
EARL HODGE 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


ALLEN G. NEWMAN 


JOAN OF ARC* INTERNATIONAL CELEBRATION OF 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. INDEPENDENCE DAY, JUL Ysiiors 
STRUCK MEDAL, OBV. BRONZE, REV. SIL- 
VER 


U.S. VALOR MEDAL, NATIONAL ARTS DEAN JOSEPH FRENCH JOHNSON, 
CLUB COMPETITION* N. Y¥. UNIVERSITY figz2 
BRONZE, STRUCK PIECE STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


HAMPDEN COUNTY MEMORIAL BRIDGE, 1922 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


360 


Ss le Oir enue DA IALSei os AN Dae DH BL RYE XH BITS 


CHARLES H. NIEHAUS 
MR. AND MRS. JAMES BRITE* MODEL FOR ATHENAEUM CLUB, 
PLASTER PLAQUE BALTIMORE, MD. 
PLASTER MEDALLION 
JAMES NOVELLI 
CHARLOTTE BRAINARD 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE, UNIFACE 
ANDREW O’CONNOR, SR. 


REV. J. J. POWERS 
PLASTER MEDALLION 


ADAMERTE TZ 

JOHN MARSHALL, 1755-1835 DOROTHY, 1908 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. MEDAL, GALVANO GILT 
HELEN, 1908 HENRY N. MUDGE, 1911, AMERICAN 

MEDAL, GALVANO GILT PRICATERIC SOCIETY 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. 

MY MOTHER 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. 400TH TELEPHONE BATTALION, U. 

S..A. AMERICAN EXPEDITIONARY 

GOOD LUCK AND VICTORY FORCES, FRANCE, 1919 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT OBV. STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


SEV PE NOKRE BECK 
PENTONSAWAKD, CLEVELAND ART SAME 


ASSOCIATION* STRUCK PLAQUETTE, BRONZE, OBV. AND 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. REV. 
BUC YEE RKINSeRIPLEY 
WAR 


CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE, UNIFACE 


EDWARD SAWYER 


CHIEF SOTA COLALA, SIOUX INDIAN  BE-SHA-E-CHI-E-DI-ESHA, CROW IN- 
BRONZE MEDALLION* DIAN* 
BRONZE MEDALLION 


FORTY ASSORTED BRONZE MEDALS OF VARIOUS INDIAN TRIBES 


ee ORT OsSCUW EZR 


REN GHORGE TAYLOR CHARLES E. DANA 

PLAQUE STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE GILT, OBV. 
ries LISTS MOTHER MORRISON 

CAST PLAQUE, GALVANO GILT PLAQUE 


SWISS RELIEF FUND MEMORIAL FIRST PRIZE SINGING CONTEST, 
TABLET* PHILADELPHIA, 1919 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE PLAQUETTE 


361 


Crs fOr WE DAL TSS) AN Dist TH EER extra Balales 


J. OTTO SCHWEIZER—ConrTINuED. 


S. WEIR MITGHELL 
CAST PLAQUE, BRONZE GILT 


GOV. MARTIN G. BRUMBAUGH 
STUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


PENNSYLVANIA NATIONAL GUARD* 
CAST MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


SAME. 
SMALL STRUCK MEDAL 


PRIEDRICH SILCHER 
CAST PLAQUETTE, BRONZE GILT 


THEODORE SPICER-SIMSON 


KATHERINE GABAUDAN* 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE, OBV. 


WILLIAM H. SCHUCHARDT, 1919 
CAST MEDALLION, BRONZE, OBV. 


PORTRAIT 
GALVANO GILT, OBV. 


JONATHAN M. SWANSON 


H. M. KING VICTOR EMMANUEL III 
OF ITALY, NEW YORK NUMISMATIC 
CLUB 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


CENTENAK YS OF ViHEe DA la Egor 
PLATTSBURGH, 1814-1914* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


D. W. VALENTINE, PRESIDENTS s 
THE NEW YORK NUMISMATIC CLUB, 
1918 AND 1920 

STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. 


JOHN SANFORD SALTUS, 1923 
COLORED PLASTER MEDALLION 


LORADO TAFT 
JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY, 1849-1916* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 
FREDERICKSPasU RTE Bis 


EDUCATIONAL AWARD, ORDER OF THE SONS OF ITALY? THESSt Ape 
NEW YORK* 
STRUCK MEDAL, BRONZE, OBV. AND REV. 


ADOLPH A. WEINMAN 


J. SANFORD SALTUS AWARD, AMER- 
ICAN NUMISMATIC SOCIETY* 
STRUCK MEDAL (GALVANOS, MOUNTED ON 
WOOD) 


Mi SI NAISHOSPITAR WA Rear hye 
MEDAL* 


STRUCK MEDAL (GALVANOS, MOUNTED ON 
Woop) 


BOBBIE 
PLAQUE, MOUNTED 


MILDRED W. THOMPSON 
MEDALLION, SKETCH 


 INEES@ ESO. 
PLAQUE 


THEODORE N. VAIL MEMORIAL, 
AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELE- 
GRAPH: GO# 
STRUCK MEDAL (GALVANOS, MOUNTED ON 
Woop) 


LOUISE HETTINGER 
PLAQUE, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


KATHERINE JANE WEINMAN 
MEDALLION, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


ROBERT, HIS WORLD 
MEDALLION 


HOWARD R. WEINMAN 
MEDALLION 


362 


Peon Oran Peas elon ipo een ND et Hr Re ob Xin BITS 


ADOLPH A. WEINMAN—ContTINuED. 


ADELAIDE Ue DISCHARGE BUTTON* 
PORTRAIT RELIEF, MOUNTED ON WOOD 


SEX TYSePEAS TER MODELS FORGMEDALS 
I J. SANFORD SALTUS AWARD, AMERICAN NUMISMATIC SOCIETY 
I] THE CIVIC FORUM, NEW YORK, IQI7 
III] U.S. MEDAL FOR LIFE-SAVING ON RAILROADS 
IV THEODORE N. VAIL MEMORIAL MEDAL 
V_ UNIVERSAL EXPOSITION, ST. LOUIS, MO., 1904 
VI THE EDISON MEDAL 
VII MT. SINAI HOSPITAL WAR SERVICE MEDAL, 1907-1919 
VIII vu. s. SILVER DOLLAR, HALF-DOLLAR, QUARTER AND DIME 


JULIA BRACKEN WENDT 


JOHN MUIR MARIANA 
COLORED PLASTER PLAQUE COLORED PLASTER PLAQUE 


303 


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oy ae 
; 
Bae J 
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: ' 
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A, 
\ 
. 


. = ee 


LON UDMEL DS IRGC) SCORE ah COR Se 
AON GOe aiids IDE IB IES bos: 


ONHTE OS TAO) SCAU B ETP OS 
DENTE eaeleles os 


i PAGE 
ABBATE, PAOLES eee} 
1931 Broadway, New York City 


ADAMS, HERBERT . . 2, 266-7,323,351 
ie est 11th Street, N.Y. C. 
AITKEN, ROBERT 1. . 5, 268-9,323,351 
G30, West 25th Street, N. Y. C. 
AKELEY, Car E. 


American Museum re Nat. 
‘ Hist., New York City 


ALLEN, Louise (Mrs.L.A.Hobbs) 9, 323 
45 Charles Street, Boston, Mass. 


ees 


Pere MILIO « . «. . « . Q, 324 
oroullivyan Street; N:. Y.-C. 

APEL, MARIE. . 110,324 
3 Washington Square, Noy: 


ATKINS, ALBERT HENRY . 10, 324, 351 
45 Charles Street, Boston, Mass. 


BAER,LILLIAN(Mrs.Herbert M. & 3, 324 
601 Madison Avenue, N. Y. 


BAKER, ROBERT P. . a fe Ser 
602 Madison Avenue, N. Y. C. 
BARNARD, GEORGE GREY. . 324 


454 Fort Washington Avenue, 
New York City. 


BARNHORN, CLEMENT J]. . 


- 17, 324 
Art Academy, Cincinnati, Ohio 


BARTLETT, MADELEINEA. . . 
755 Boylston Street, Boston, 
Mass. 


Wy aiea 


BARTLETT, PAUL W. 
14 Rue du Commandeur, Paris, 
France. 


18, 325 


BATCHELDER, Mrs. N. H., 
Longman, Evelyn B. 


SEC 


BEACH, CHESTER . 21, 270-1 
Boveeast 17th street, N.Y. 


BENNETT, BELLE . . 
152)t.ast 63rd Street, ROG 


D293 34 
on 


22,325 


BERGE, EDWARD . 22, 272-3, 325, 352 
1335  Greenmeunt Avenue, 
Baltimore; Md. 


PAGE 
BIAFORA, ENEA . . 255325 


15 East 14th Street, IN| NEE 


BILOTTI, SALVATORE . . 5, 325 
19 MacDougal Alley, Nove cC 


BORGLUM, (JOHN) GUTZON . . 26, 326 
Stamford, Conn. 

BorGLumM*, SoLon H. 29, 320 

BouLton, JosEPH LORKOWSKI . 20, 326 


424 West 20th Sirectia Newer G 


BRENNER, VICTOR D.., 30, 274-5, 326, 352 
119 East 1oth Street, ING ee 


BRINDESI, OLYMPIO . . le SENS 
wl Thompson Street, N. Y. es 
Brown, Sonia (Mrs. W. Gordon 
Brown) we E25 726 
6 MacDougal Alley, N. ve 
BROWNE, Matitpa (Mrs. Fred. 
Van Wyck) . 5 Oy Sore 
142 East 18th Street, IN ane 
BusH-Brown, H. K. . . « 258, 326 
720 mcrae (leet, Washington, 
Da 
CADORIN, ETTORE. . . 320,95 52 
440 Riverside Drive, N. Y. c 
CALDER, A. STIRLING Vee) Seek, 
Dipeastai4tipotrect mY 3s 
CHAMPLAIN, DUANE . . 355 327 
509 West 161st Street, Ney. C, 
GUARKSALUAN: << eye ey: 
2a asteieth Street, Nieves 
COHEN, NESSA . e255) B27 
1143 ‘Lexington Ave., TNE Re 
CONKLING, MasBeEt (Mrs. Paul 
Conmkiine) ees 5482 70, 2 740350 
26, West 6th Street, N.Y ..C. 


CONKLING, PAUL . ee SON ee Aare 
5 MacDougal Alley, N eae, ee 


Cooper, ELIZABETH . . 
Stamford, Conn. 


36, 327 


CorBETT, GAIL SHERMAN (Mrs. 
Harvey We Corbett), 37-327; 352-3 
44s West 2ist<strect, Ney aes 


307 


[DN DEX Oss CUP POR Se cA.N Ds Cr DALLAS 


PAGE 


CosTIGAN, IDA . 38, 328 
Orangeburg, New York. 
CRASKE, LEONARD . . M730), 320 
22 St. Botolph Studios, Boston, 
Mass. 
CRENIER, HENRI 40, 328 


Shore Acres, Mamaroneck, N.Y. 


CRrESSON, MARGARET FRENCH 
(Mrs. ie 
Glendale, Mass. 


DALLIN, Cyrus E. 


40, 328 


- 43, 277, 328, 353 


69 Oakland Ave., Arlington 
Heights, Mass. 
DAVIDSON, Jo. 44, 328 


Fearon Galleries, New York 
City: 
De Francisci, ANTHONY, 
47, 278-9, 328, 353 
24 West. 60th Street, N.Y AC. 
DERUJINSKY, GLEB 


vr. 5) eile els Ce: 
1 West 67th Street, Navas 


DIEDERICH, HUNT. = & - 50, 320 
50% Barrow Streets yor 
Di Fitrpro, ANTONIO 250,320 


306 Rivington Street, N. Y, GF 


DONATO, GIUSEPPE) 2s 40,320 
Philadelphia, 


716 Walnut St., 


Pa. 
EBERHARD, ROBERT G. . 51, 329 
154 West 55th Street, N:. Nae. 
EBERLE, ABASTENTA OT tle) 52, 320 
2o4, Westiinthoireeteon yc» 
ELLERHUSEN, ULRIc HENRY, 
5, 280-1, 329, 354 
51 West 10th oireet, Neel e C 
EY JOHN S 55s 30 
180 Thirteenth Avenue, Ne Ver) 
EvANS, RUDULPH . 57, 330 
ma Washington Place, N. Y. C. 
Eyre, Louisa 58, 330, 354 
1003 opmice otrect, 
Philadelphia, Pa. 
FARNHAM, SALLY JAMES —_50,, 330, 354 
57a WESt. 5 7 ol reetae ny eek 
FENTON, BEATRICE 60, 330 
1523 Chestnut Street, Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 


PAGE 
FJELDE, PAUL 62, 282-3, 330, 354 
102 Pineapple Street, Brockman 
New York. 


FLANAGAN, JOHN 63, 284-5, 354-5 
1931 Broadway, (NeayY 


FLORIO, SALVATOR E. Ai 
24 West 6oth ptreet, Neo 


FRASER, JAMES EARLE 
66, 280-7, 330, 355 
3 MacDougal Alley, N. Y. C. 


FRASER, LAURA GARDIN (Mrs. 
James Earle ae 


2 alae 
3 MacDougal Ales NGaY cae 


FRENCH, DANIEL C., 


65, 330 


70, 290-1, 331, 350 
12 West 8th Street, N. Y. C. 


FRIEDLANDER, LEO Sg ae 
637 Madison Avenue, Nw iYaces 

FRISHMUTH, HARRIET W. . . 74, 331 
i52 East 36th Street; Nos yee 

FROMEN, AGNES V. pee oi 
6016 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Ill. 

PRY, OHERRY sce 78, 332 


21 Carmine Street, N. YG 
Fucus, EMiL _ .. 81,°202=3)933 46 Gum 
So West goth Street, Nig ye 


GANIERE, GEORGE E. 
6016 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, Ill. 


GELERT, JOHANNES 


GLEESON, Mrs. Cl “iiesee 
Schulenburg, Adele 


GRAFLY, CHARLES. 
131 No. 20th Street, 
delphia, Pa. 


GREGORY, JOHN 
126 East 38th Street, N Aves 


GRIMES, FRANCES. 88, 204-5, 332, 357 
220 East 485th Street, Ney 


83, 332 


332 


apa aed 
Phila- 


87, 332 


Gruppe, KARL/H. «, oe eee! 
Rumsey Studio, Wheatley 
Hills, Westbury, Lagi 
GUINZBURG, FREDERIC V. . . , 333 
21 West Soth street, Nese Cr 
HAMMER, TRYGVE 925.333 


1931 Broadway, Ni Ya 


368 


MND ex OOP rok S AND MEDAL FS ES 


PAGE 
Hancock, WALKER ee estos 
106 West Moreland Avenue, 
Chestnut Hill, Pa. 


HARVEY, ELI 
50 Charles Street, Mey. C. 


HASWELL, ERNEsT BRUCE 096, 333, 357 
Art Academy, Cincinnati, Ohio 


Ware LES) 


Hawks, Racuet. M. ~ (Mrs. 
Arthur W. Hawks) . . 07, 333 
Ruxton, Baltimore County, 
Md. 
HEBER, CARL A. 67,333 


Nyack, New York 


HERING,* EvsiE Warp (Mrs. 
Henry Hering) es ee) 
HERING, HENRY a 


4 West 33rd Street, N. Y. 


HERZEL, PAUL ; 12250; 234 
310 East 141st Street, N.Y.C. 


PIVeARD FREDERICK C. . . 103; 334 
6209 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, III. 


HINTON, CHARLES L. 104, 206, 334, 357 
74 Gard Avenue, Armour Villa 
Park, Bronxville, N. Y. 


HoFEMAN, MALVINA.. . 
isy E. 35th Street, uN. Y. ie 


Hom, VicTor S. 
Washington University, 
Biemeouis, Mo. 


PewARb cbc Dk B. . . . 111, 
14 Avenue du Maine, Paris, 
France 


. 107, 334 


08,334 


230) 


Howarp, Ropert B. . Lis 
1401 Le Roy Avenue, Berkeley, 
al, ) 
HOWLAND, EDITH mhi36335 
Catskill-on-Hudson, Ney: 
Hunt, CrypE Du VERNET _.. 113, 335 


17 rue Campagne Premiere, 
Paris, France 


EivAtr, ANNA V. . .114,-297, 335, 357 
49 West 12th Street, N. Y. C. 


Jacosps, MicHer M. el MUU SEE 
58 West 57th Street, We Jace. 
JAEGERS, ALBERT bio, 335 


Monsey, New York 


PAGE 


Jennins, F. Lynn  . P25 
40 Central Park South, New 
York City 
JENNEWEIN, Go PAUL . 5. 122, 335 
500) West 206th streets N.Y. C. 
JEweETT, MAUDE SHERWOOD (Mrs. 
Edward H.) . leas 
45 East 61st Street, N. Y. C. 
JOHNSON, GRACE Mott mi 25 330 
145 Trenchard Street, Yonkers, 
Neal 
Juszko, JEAN 1249330435 7 
59 East 50th Street, Sees 
KAWAMURA, (10708 2 4 4, 2120) 357 
5S west 16th Street, NOY. CG: 
KEYSER, ERNEST WISE . . . 126, 336 
BAG W estavath Street N ay... Ce. 
KIELENYI, JULIO —. Pe20) 356 
20 East goth Street, NEG 
KontTI, ISIDORE oA, 2215 
314 Riverdale Avenue, Yon- 
kers, NY? 
KoRBEL, Mario J. . Det See ere ts. 
819 Madison Avenue, N. Y. C. 


Lapp, ANNA CoLEeMAN (Mrs.) 
133, 336, 358 
270 Clarendon Street, Boston, 
Mass. 


LAESSLE, ALBERT . . . eel s4 330 
38 West Washington Lane, 
Germantown, Pa. 
LANGTON, BERENICE (Mrs. 
Daniel W. Langton) £2130,.356 
2o7valastetstheotrect, Ne Ya.C, 
LATHROP, GERTRUDE K. ... ... 136, 337 
151 50. Allem Street, Albany, 
IN ea 
LAWRIE, LEE Meee eeu, 
250 West 55th Street, Nave G. 
Lawson-Peacey, Jess (Mrs.) 140, 337 
110 Madison Avenue, N. Y. C. 
LEE, ARTHUR. . Meet 4O; 337 
9) MacDougal Alley, Nee ee 
LENTELLI, LEO . mee Aas 337 
51 West 1oth Street, Nice Ge 
LENZ, ALFRED D. EAA 37 


71 Broadway, Flushing, Nee 


369 


END EX) OSS CUP TT OORTS =A NDP eM EDA si saie 


PAGE 
LOBER, GEORG | eos 2, 147,337 0555 
GO hastel sthwotreete News wos 


LONGMAN, EVELYN B. (Mrs. N.H. 
Batchelder) . . 148, 298, 338, 358 
Windsor, Conn. 


LORENZANI, ARTHUR E. Ml 5 ly 330 
232) West 14th Street, N. Y. C 


LUKEMAN, AUGUSTUS .. . . 152, 338 
68 West 56th Street, N. Y. C. 


MacMonnlEs, FREDERICK W. 155, 338 
51 West toth Street, N.Y. C. 


MacNeIiL, Carov B. (Mrs.), 157, 338 
College Point, New. York. 
MacNeIL, HERMON A., 
158, 300-1, 338, 359 


College Point, New York. 


MansHIP, PAUL . 161, 304-5, 338, 359 
Amer. Academy, Rome, Porta 
San Pancrazio, Rome—2o, 
Italy. 
MARTINY, PHILIP . . 
369 West Derdwotrcep NEC. 


Mayer, Louis . E8162 4 556 
253 West 42d Street, Ny cn 
Mayor, Harriet Hyatt (Mrs.), 


163, 339 
Princeton, 


259 


104 Mercer Street, 
INS |e 
McCann, Minna (Mrs.) 163, 330 
S1Ov tot) or eter. a. |acksonmads : 
New Orleans, La. 


McCarTANn, EDWARD, 164, 299, 339, 359 
157 East 35th Street, Wey Ce 


McKenzi£, RosertT T., 


, 167, 302-3, 339, 359-60 
2014 Pine Street, Philadelphia, 
Pa. 
MELLON ELEANOR V2. e168, 340 
157 .Bastes 5thimtreets IN sax 5G, 


MEYENBERG, JOHN C.. . S16dn336 
[27 bee ord sotrect,, Cincinnati, 
Ohio 


MEYER, ALVIN W. . Ve PF, BRO 
Peabody Institute, Baltimore, 
Md. 
NMILIONE, LOUIS =o) = Rive eee ete 
i247) 5-8 24th eotneete -Philadel- 


phia, Pa. 


PAGE 
MILLER, J. MAXWELL, 
172, 306-7, 339, 360 


1335 Greenmount Ave., Balti- 
more, Md. 
MonTANA, PIETRO ss) 2 2OO Mere. 
75 Wilson Avenue, Brooklyn, 
eae yar 
MorAHAN, EUGENE H. . 260, 360 


19031 Broadway, NAG, 


Mott-SmitH, May .  . eee On 
355 So. Harvard Blvd., Los 
Angeles, Calif. 
MuRRAY, SAMUEL. . 261, 340 
3326 Lancaster Ave., "Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 
NEANDROSS, SIGURD. . . + L75n 40 
Ridgefield, New Jersey. 
NEBEL, BERTHOLD Ge ele ee 
Carnegie Institute, Pitts- 
burgh, Pa. 
NEWMAN, ALLEN G.. ole 175, 308, 300 
1947 Broadway, N. Y. C. 
Nico.osi, JOSEPH . . . . 4) 2602p a0 
i21 East 23rd Street? Naw 
NIEHAUS, CHARLES H., 


176, 300, 340, 361 
Eagle Crest Studio, Grantwood, 
Neel: 


Novani, GIULIO . . 1705340 
1347 Intervale Avenue, Now 


NovELui, JAMES 170 nen 
400 West 23rd Street, Nesyare 

O’Connor, ANDREW JR. . 180, 341, 361 
Paxton, Mass. 

O’Connor, ANDREW SR. . . . 180, 340 
Holden, Worcester Co., Mass. 

PADDOCK, WILLARD D.. (|) 9iigeagees 
7 West 43rd Street, Nim yeu 

PAEFF, BASHKA . - 1847344 
6 Pinckney St., Boston, “Mass. 

Parsons, EpitH B. (Mrs.) . . 185, 341 
13 Vandamme. Street, INA) eee 

Perry, R. HINTON - 196,341 


51 West 1oth Street, NOYe@ 


PICCIRILLI; AT? HAG pO are 
4607 East 142d Street, Nosy 


379 


NCD IE Xe Ones (Orin TOR 8° A NiDyoM.E DAILAS TS 


PAGE 
PreCIRILLT, FURIO .. . 190, 341 
C.. 


407 East 142d Street, No Ye 


MecrRILGIatlORACES 9 a =. 10323541 
Poe edstald2d otreet..N. y. Ce 
PiETz, ADAM . 262, 341, 361 


ae a Clapier St. Philadelphia, 
Pa 


PoLAsex, PXLBIN) Woes D104 342 
Art Institute of Chicago, 
Chicago, Ill. 
PORTNOFF, ALEXANDER . 67, 342 
703 Walnut Sis ‘inde lahaves 
Pa 
PEANAR, RENEE. By ey.) 
45 Christopher Street, N. Y. C. 
Proctor, A. PHIMISTER . ; .. 198, 342 
433 Melville Ave., Palo Alto, 
Calif. 
PUTNAM, BRENDA... . Ao 
49 West 12th ptreet, NY cs 
QuINN, Epmonp T. 202753 AZ 


207 East 61st Street, Nea. 


PGi ARRY LEWIS . . .'. 205, 342 
1809 Washington Blvd.,Easton, 
as 


REBECK, STEVEN . Pere205 4 103 Ol 
4036 Cooper Ave., Cleveland, 
Ohio. 
RECCHIA, RICHARD H.. . 2003343 


5 Madison Court, Boston, Mass. 
RipLtey, Lucy Perkins (Mrs.), 


206, 343, 361 
Spoewesti12th otreet, N.Y: C. 
RisQuE, CAROLINE E. (Mrs. 
JANIS) 207, 343 


7623 Henderson I Road, Clay ‘ton, 
Mo 


ee HELEN AVERY P2072 B42 
200 West 58th Street, N. Y. C. 


RotH, FREDERICK G. R. 200, 343 
Sherwood Place, Englewood, 
No 4. 


RUMBOLD-KoHN, ESTELLE (Mrs.) 
40 West 59th Street, N. Y. C. 


CHARLES CARY 


343 


RUMSEY™, pa 4as4 


SALEMME, ANTONIO pel wine sy.) 
S 


53 Washington Square, N.Y. 


371 


PAGE 
SALERNO, VINCENT P2ise 44 
(Ce 


119 East 23rd Street, N. Y. 


SALVATORE, “VICIOR 1)” 2. 5 214, 344 
9 MacDougal Alley, N. Y. C. 


SANFORD, EDWARD FIELD 216, 344 
AQu yw. estel sty otreeteN ay CG. 


DAVIDLE) ORUCE, WILDERN) es 2177 344 
Ohio State University, Colum- 
bus, Ohio 


SAWYER, EDWARD WARREN, 


21Sea Lbs Ol 
2 Broadfield Road, Folkestone, 
Eng. 
SCHAAF, ANTON Palor ad 


1031 Broadway, N. eG 
SCHULENBURG, ADELE (Mrs. C. 


Kk. Gleeson) 210 
115 Edwin Avenue, Kirkwood, 
Mo. 
SCHULER, HANS 2 220, 344 


Bulsast ‘Lafayette Street, Balti- 
more, Md. 


SCHWEIZER, J. OTTO 
. 223, 312-3, 344, 301-2 
2215 West Venango St., Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 


SCUDDER, JANET . e224 4s 
40 Washington Mews, NoYes 


SHEPHERD, J]. CLINTON . 226, 345 
j24oWayverly PlaceaN ay aC. 


SHERWOOD, RUTH. . B22 As 
3146 Lake Park Avenue, 
Chicago, Ill. 
SHONNARD, EUGENIE F. 227 
108 West 54th Street, N. Ie 
SHRADY,* Henry M. 228. AG 
Simons, AMoRY C. . ee ae 345 


207 asta 7th street, N.Y. 


SLtocuM, ANNETTE MARCELLUS 


(Mrs.) . 263, 345 
250 West 154th Street, Nea ae 


SPICER-SIMSON, I HEODORE 232, 314, 362 


Century Assoc., 7 W. 43rd 
St., New York City 
STEA, CAESAR. 2s AG 
301 East 31st Street, N. Y. C. 


DN OD EXT OS SOW LP OR SS: GAN De ME AVIA oaks 


PAGE 
STERLING, LINDSEY Morris 


(Mrs.) 233, 340 
Old Wood Road, ‘Edgewater, 
New Jersey 
SWAN, PAUL pe 2354 O46 
1244 Fifth Ave., Los Angeles, 
Calif. 


SWANSON, J. M. . tess, Fs. S02 
57 West 37th Street, N. Y. C. 


TAFT, LORADO ©. 2F4 ANT, FAG, 302 
6016 Ellis Ave., Chicago, III 


TALBOT, GRACE HELEN . . 236, 346 
L West: 67th otreet, Naw YG. 


TRIEBE LS eke $237,753 10,402 
Northern Blvd., College Point, 
New York 


VAGIS, FOLYGNoOros Gy" 2 sao 
23 MacDougal Alley, N. Y. C. 


Van Wyck, FREDERICK (Mrs.) 


see Browne, Matilda 
VEDDER,* ELIHU LPBfeh CP8 


VONNOH, Bessie Potrer (Mrs. 


Robert W. Vonnoh) .. . 241, 347 
S35 uWeSt OF otreet oN wey at: 
WAKEMAN, ROBERT C. ~ 203,347 


618 West 142nd Street, N. 
yoRER 


PAGE 
WALKER, NELLIE V.  . 2, 347 
6016 Ellis Avenue, Chicago, ie 
WALTER, EDGAR- +. 4 . . 2455 34a 
1803 Franklin St., San Fran- 
cisco; Gal’. 
WALTER, VALERIE . 245, 347 


602 Madison Avenue, N. Y. CE 


WEINMAN, ADOLPH A. 
246, 318-9, 347, 302-3 
441 West 21st Street; Ney 0G 
WENDT, JULIA BRACKEN (Mrs.) 248, 363 
2814 N. Sichel St., Los Angeles, 
Cal. 


WENIGER, Maria P. 


ewes) he: 
442 East 58th Street, Ney cee 


WHEELER, E. KATHLEEN . 249, 348 
Hillside, Wis. 
WHITNEY, GERTRUDE VANDER- 
BILT (Mrs.. Harry Payne 
Whitney) 250, 348 


10 Hest Alley, Nove 


WRIGHT, ALICE MORGAN . 250, 346 
393 State Street, Albany, New 
York 


Younc, MAHonRI M. . | 2253 pe46 
148 Prospect Street, Leontay 
Neds 
Z1iMM, BRuNo Louts 254, 348 


Woodstock, N. Y. 


372 


LE AMINVZIE 
TANNO LA PER= 
FEZIONE MA LA 


PERFEZIONE NON 
LE VNA AINVZIA 


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SA 


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